Title: Neoadjuvant Therapy for Esophageal Cancer
1Neoadjuvant Therapy for Esophageal Cancer
Daniel Morgensztern, M.D.
2Overview
- Background
- Neoadjuvant radiotherapy
- Neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- Neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy
- Neoadjuvant or definitive chemoradiotherapy
- The significance of pathologic CR
- Strategies to improve outcome
- Conclusions
3EpidemiologyWorldwide
- Worldwide estimates for 2000
- Eight most common cancer with 412,000 new cases
- Sixth most common cause of cancer death with
338,000 deaths - 2002 update
- 462,000 new cases
- 386,000 deaths
Parkin DM, Lancet Oncol 2001 2 533-543 Parkin
DM, CA Cancer J Clin. 20055574-108
4EpidemiologyUS
- US estimates for 2005
- 14,520 new cases
- 11,220 male
- 3,300 female
- 13,570 deaths
Jemal A CA Cancer J Clin. 20055510-30
5AJCC StagingT Stage
6AJCC StagingN stage
7AJCC Staging and Prognosis After Complete
Surgical Removal of the Tumor
Ezinger PC, N Engl J Med 2003 3492241-2252
8Neoadjuvant Radiotherapy
- Rationale
- Decrease tumor size with potential increase in
resectability - Improve local control
- Decrease the number of viable cells with possible
minimization of intraoperative spilling - Disadvantages
- No effect in micrometastatic disease
- Delay in definitive therapy
9Neoadjuvant RadiotherapyRandomized Trials
10Neoadjuvant RadiotherapyMeta-analysis
- Oesophageal Cancer Collaborative Group
- 5 trials including 1147 patients
- Increased 2-year survival from 30 to 34 (95 CI
0-9) - Increased 5-year survival from 15 to 18 (95 CI
0-8) - Arnott SJ, Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys 1998
41 579-583 - Arnott SJ, Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2000 4
CD001799
11Neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- Rationale
- Downstage of the disease with potential increase
in resectability - Improvement in local control
- Eradication of micrometastatic disease
- Pathologic evaluation of treatment response with
possible selection of adjuvant therapy - Disadvantages
- Delay in definitive therapy with risk of disease
spreading - Limited efficacy of the available
chemotherapeutic agents
12Neoadjuvant chemotherapyRandomized Trials
13Neoadjuvant chemotherapyINT 0113 and MRC Trials
14Neoadjuvant chemotherapyMeta-analysis
- Cochrane Database 2003
- 11 Randomized trials involving 2051 patients
- Clinical relevance based on median survival and 1
to 5 year survival - When specific survival was not available, it was
calculated from the published survival curves - Pooled response rate to chemotherapy was about
36 with 3 pCR - No difference in survival at 1 and 2 years
- Survival advantage starts at 3 years and reaches
statistical significance at 5 years - Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2003 4 CD001556
15Neoadjuvant chemotherapyMAGIC Trial
16Neoadjuvant chemotherapyMAGIC Trial
- Overall, both median survival (24 m vs 20 m) and
5-year OS (36 vs 23) favored neoadjuvant therapy - On multivariate analysis, treatment effect was
unchanged after adjustment for primary site - Perioperative chemotherapy significantly
increased both PFS and OS in patients with
gastric or lower esophageal cancer
17Neoadjuvant Chemoradiotherapy
- Rationale
- Combine the benefits from both therapeutic
modalities Downstage of the tumor facilitating
surgical resection and eradication of
micrometastatic disease - Increase the number of pathologic complete
remissions which may translate into improved
survival - Disadvantages
- Patients may not undergo surgery due to toxicity
or tumor progression - Increased post-operative mortality
18Neoadjuvant ChemoradiotherapyNon-Randomized
Trials
- 46 trials from 1981 to 1999
- 2704 patients 69 SCC, 31 Adenocarcinoma
- RT dose from 30 to 60 Gy
- Majority of studies used 5-FU and cisplatin
- Resection rate 74
- Pathologic CR 24 (32 surgical patients)
- Patterns of recurrence after surgical resection
- - Locoregional 9
- - Distant 31
- - Both 6
Geh JI, Br J Surg 2001 88338-356.
19Neoadjuvant ChemoradiotherapyRandomized Trials
20Neoadjuvant ChemoradiotherapyMeta-analyses
- Urschel J, Am J Surg 2003 185 538-543
- - Neoadjuvant chemoradiation improves 3-year
survival, with more significant benefit in the
concurrent studies (OR 0.45, 95 CI 0.26 to 0.79,
p 0.005) - - Decrease LR but not distant recurrences
- Fiorica F, Gut 200453 925-930
- - Neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy significantly
reduces the 3-year mortality rate (OR 0.53, 95
CI 0.26 to 0.72, p 0.03) - - Risk of postoperative mortality is higher in
the neoadjuvant group ( OR 2.10, 95 CI
1.18-3.73, p 0.01) - Greer SE, Surgery 2005 137 172-177
- - Neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy is associated
with a small, non-statistically significant
improvement in overall survival (RR of death in
neoadjuvant group 0.86, 95 CI 0.74 to 1.01, p
0.07) - Malthaner RA, BMC Med 2004 2 35
- A significant difference in the risk of mortality
at 3-years favors neoadjuvant chemoradiation (RR
0.87, 95 CI 0.80-0.96, p 0.004) -
None of the meta-analysis included Burmeisters
study, which has been recently published (Lancet
Oncol 2005) and at that time was available only
in abstract form
21The Role of Surgery after Chemoradiotherapy
- The 5-year survival for chemoradiotherapy in
patients with unresectable locally advanced
esophageal cancer was 26 in the RTOG 85-01 trial
- The subsequent INT 0123 showed a 2-year survival
of 40 in the control standard-dose RT arm - These results are similar to those achieved with
surgery alone or neoadjuvant chemoratiotherapy
followed by surgery
Cooper JS, JAMA 1999 281 1623-1627 Minsky BD, J
Clin Oncol 2002 20 1167-1174
22The Role of Surgery after Chemoradiotherapy
- FFCD 9102 Bedenne ASCO 2002 (abstract 519)
- FC X 2 RT
- Responders randomized to S or additional CRT
- S CRT
- 2-year OS 34 40 OR 0.91, p 0.56
- Median survival 17.7 m 19.3m
- No significant difference in survival
- Surgery was associated with improved local
control - - Decreased use of stent (13 versus 27 p
0.005) - - Decrease use of dilations (22 versus 32 p
0.07)
23The Role of Surgery after Chemoradiotherapy
- GOCSG Stahl M, J Clin Oncol 2005 23 2310-2317
- FLEP X 3 ? EP 40 Gy ? surgery (89 patients)
- FLEP X 3 ? EP gt 66Gy (88 patients)
- S CRT
- 3-year OS 31.3 24.4
- Median survival 16.4 m 14.9 m
- CRT resulted in equivalent survival with
preserved esophagus - Surgery significantly increased local control
- Survival curves appear to spread after 3 years
but without reaching statistical significance - Patients responding to induction therapy appear
to have good prognosis regardless of surgical
intervention
24Pathologic CR
- Pathologic CR in randomized clinical trials
- Neoadjuvant chemotherapy 2.5 to 15
- Neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy 10 to 28
- Several trials have demonstrated improved
survival in patients achieving pCR
25Pathologic CR
26New Strategies
- Incorporation of new chemotherapy agents
- Taxanes, irinotecan, oxaliplatin
- Addition of a targeted agent
- - COX-2 inhibitors, EGFR inhibitors, bevacizumab
- Intensification of neoadjuvant therapy
- - Triplets with concomitant RT (CF taxane)
- - Triplets without RT (ECF, CF taxane)
- Induction chemotherapy followed by concomitant
chemoratiotherapy
27Conclusions
- Surgery remains the mainstay for a curative
approach in esophageal cancer - Neoadjuvant RT does not appear to decrease local
relapse or improve survival in patients with
resectable esophageal cancer - The role of neoadjuvant chemotherapy remains
undefined with a small 5-year benefit obtained in
a meta-analysis but conflicting results from two
large randomized trials - The impact of the MAGIC trial is unclear due to
the small number of patients with esophageal
cancer - NCCN v1.2005 Preoperative chemotherapy is not
recommended as the standard of care
28Conclusions
- Neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy has been widely
accepted in US despite the lack of conclusive
evidence from phase III trials - The confirmatory trial CALGB 9781 was terminated
early due to poor accrual - Benefit from trimodality therapy may be
restricted to patients achieving significant
response or pCR and non-responders may have worse
outcome compared with patients treated with
surgery only - Small benefit observed in the 4 published
meta-analysis may change with the inclusion of
Burmeisters study - Ongoing Cochrane review
- NCCN v1.2005 Although neoadjuvant
chemoradiotherapy represents a reasonable
approach, it remains investigational due to
conflicting results from RCTs -
29Conclusions
- Surgery following neoadjuvant chemoratiotherapy
improves local and regional control but not
overall survival - Post-therapy pathologic status may be a better
predictor for outcome than the baseline clinical
AJCC staging system - The pathologic status achieved with neoadjuvant
therapy may provide an early surrogate benchmark
to speed up comparative trials
30Conclusions
- Distant relapse continues to be a major challenge
in patients presenting with locally advanced
disease - More intense chemotherapy regimens using
third-generation agents may increase the
eradication of micrometastatic disease - Patients treated with induction chemotherapy may
benefit from early evaluation of response to
avoid unnecessary delays in surgery - Larger randomized trials of neoadjuvant
chemotherapy or chemoradiotherapy are needed to
identify optimal regimens capable of producing
higher pCR rates with acceptable toxicity