胃肠道癌症术前化疗的新纪元

IF 2.9 4区 医学 Q2 GASTROENTEROLOGY & HEPATOLOGY Annals of Gastroenterological Surgery Pub Date : 2024-02-28 DOI:10.1002/ags3.12785
Keishi Yamashita
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The present study consists of a large cohort of patients with CAV as a multi-institutional study despite its rarity, and the proportion of missing data was extraordinarily small (less than 1% of study population).<span><sup>1</sup></span></p><p>They identified six prognostic factors (age, tumor diameter, pathological T factor, portal vein invasion, venous invasion, and pathological N factor) in a multivariate analysis. The prognostic factors identified in this paper were similar with those of the previous series, but the point of remarkable difference was that histological subtype was not an independent prognostic factor. The two large retrospective multicenter cohort studies evaluated the impact of histological subtypes on prognosis in patients with CAV<span><sup>2, 3</sup></span>; however, 34% and 38% of the study subjects in each study had missing data regarding histological subtype, which could potentially affect the reliability of results. In the present JSGS paper, histological subtype (pancreatobiliary and mixed type) was one of the prognostic factors associated with shorter survival but was not an independent prognostic factor through multivariate analysis. Notably, the current study had only three patients missing data regarding histological subtypes of CAV. Importance of missing data is considered to be claimed in such delicate discussion.</p><p>In this research, therapeutic strategy for CAV was also focused on, because standard therapeutic strategy for aggressive CAV has not been established yet. The current analysis was performed out of 80 patients who received postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy (AC), where 63 patients were assigned for propensity score matching (PSM). The results showed no obvious benefit of AC on recurrence free survival, which indicated preoperative chemotherapy is the only remaining potential treatment to improve patient survival of aggressive CAV at present.</p><p>Based on such interpretation of the PSM outcomes, the authors thereafter explored preoperative factors potentially predicting the independent prognostic factors (pT ≥ 2, V+, and/or N+) identified in this study, and they were associated with one of the followings: (1) CA19-9 &gt; 37 IU/mL, (2) ulcerative or mixed-type appearance, and (3) except for well-differentiated tumor, or (4) except for intestinal subtype of histology. Intriguingly, preoperative factors such as CA19-9 and gross appearance were identified, proposing that they can help enrich the potential high-risk candidate patients for preoperative chemotherapy in the near future. This finding can give not only the member of the JSGS but also world surgeons excellent reference for future research outline in CAV.</p><p>The JSGS paper included discussion between authors and discussants, the specialists of each session of the JSGS committee. Professor Kaido and Sho pointed out that AC regimen, including dose intensity and duration, are heterogeneous (S1 alone was the most frequently administered in about 60%), and that it may be important to examine the efficacy according to each regimen of chemotherapy. However, due to rarity of the disease, this critical issue would not be resolved so easily. Professor Sho also commented on the technical interpretation of similar results of relapse-free survival with overall survival, suggesting AC may have no impact on recurrence. At least, definite evidence that postoperative AC reduces recurrence in CAV has not been obtained in the present study differently from gastric cancer. As the preoperative approach for chemotherapy has recently gained oncological success in aggressive gastrointestinal cancers such as esophageal cancer<span><sup>4</sup></span> and gastric cancer,<span><sup>5</sup></span> consensus of prognostic factors and preoperative factors to predict survival may be important in the future plan for new strategies for aggressive CAV.</p><p>This issue includes three original papers describing preoperative chemotherapy in gastric cancer (Morito et al.), and colorectal cancer (Miyashita et al. and Nakagawa et al.). These papers did not describe obvious success of preoperative chemotherapy to improve survival in gastrointestinal cancer.</p><p>Morito et al. have described clinical impact of very early recurrence (VER) after preoperative chemotherapy and conversion surgery for stage IV gastric cancer. In this paper, significantly more patients had liver metastasis before initial treatment in the VER group than in the reference group, and VER patients showed the most dismal prognosis, as expected. These findings suggested that after conversion surgery of gastric cancer the VER group may exhibit similar characteristics to liver metastasis. Such clinical uniqueness may in turn be a surrogate phenotype to identify the convergent molecular features to explain chemoresistance in gastric cancer. So clinical phenotypes after neoadjuvant chemotherapy might be a promising clue for gastrointestinal surgeons fighting the most aggressive cancer in the new era.</p><p>Miyashita et al. have clarified that immune checkpoint status and oncogenic mutation profiling of rectal cancer after neoadjuvant chemotherapy (KSCC1301-A2). 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The present study consists of a large cohort of patients with CAV as a multi-institutional study despite its rarity, and the proportion of missing data was extraordinarily small (less than 1% of study population).<span><sup>1</sup></span></p><p>They identified six prognostic factors (age, tumor diameter, pathological T factor, portal vein invasion, venous invasion, and pathological N factor) in a multivariate analysis. The prognostic factors identified in this paper were similar with those of the previous series, but the point of remarkable difference was that histological subtype was not an independent prognostic factor. The two large retrospective multicenter cohort studies evaluated the impact of histological subtypes on prognosis in patients with CAV<span><sup>2, 3</sup></span>; however, 34% and 38% of the study subjects in each study had missing data regarding histological subtype, which could potentially affect the reliability of results. In the present JSGS paper, histological subtype (pancreatobiliary and mixed type) was one of the prognostic factors associated with shorter survival but was not an independent prognostic factor through multivariate analysis. Notably, the current study had only three patients missing data regarding histological subtypes of CAV. Importance of missing data is considered to be claimed in such delicate discussion.</p><p>In this research, therapeutic strategy for CAV was also focused on, because standard therapeutic strategy for aggressive CAV has not been established yet. The current analysis was performed out of 80 patients who received postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy (AC), where 63 patients were assigned for propensity score matching (PSM). The results showed no obvious benefit of AC on recurrence free survival, which indicated preoperative chemotherapy is the only remaining potential treatment to improve patient survival of aggressive CAV at present.</p><p>Based on such interpretation of the PSM outcomes, the authors thereafter explored preoperative factors potentially predicting the independent prognostic factors (pT ≥ 2, V+, and/or N+) identified in this study, and they were associated with one of the followings: (1) CA19-9 &gt; 37 IU/mL, (2) ulcerative or mixed-type appearance, and (3) except for well-differentiated tumor, or (4) except for intestinal subtype of histology. Intriguingly, preoperative factors such as CA19-9 and gross appearance were identified, proposing that they can help enrich the potential high-risk candidate patients for preoperative chemotherapy in the near future. 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As the preoperative approach for chemotherapy has recently gained oncological success in aggressive gastrointestinal cancers such as esophageal cancer<span><sup>4</sup></span> and gastric cancer,<span><sup>5</sup></span> consensus of prognostic factors and preoperative factors to predict survival may be important in the future plan for new strategies for aggressive CAV.</p><p>This issue includes three original papers describing preoperative chemotherapy in gastric cancer (Morito et al.), and colorectal cancer (Miyashita et al. and Nakagawa et al.). These papers did not describe obvious success of preoperative chemotherapy to improve survival in gastrointestinal cancer.</p><p>Morito et al. have described clinical impact of very early recurrence (VER) after preoperative chemotherapy and conversion surgery for stage IV gastric cancer. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

本期首次收录了 2023 年 7 月在函馆举行的 AGsurg 论坛上选出的 JSGS 论文。JSGS论文分别从上消化道(胃肠道)、下消化道、HPB(肝胆胰)和普外科四个分会场的数百篇申请论文中遴选出来,遴选过程认真、细致、循序渐进,经过多次富有成效的辩论,并在日本胃肠外科医生中达成共识。成田等人最初发表的论文报告了京都大学的波多野医生在函馆提交的 460 例瓦氏盲肠癌(CAV)的临床病理分析,波多野医生也是本手稿的通讯作者,他还获得了 HPB 手术分会的 AGsurg 论坛奖。1 他们在多变量分析中确定了六个预后因素(年龄、肿瘤直径、病理 T 因子、门静脉侵犯、静脉侵犯和病理 N 因子)。本文确定的预后因素与之前的系列研究相似,但显著不同之处在于组织学亚型并非独立的预后因素。两项大型回顾性多中心队列研究评估了组织学亚型对 CAV 患者预后的影响2、3;然而,每项研究中分别有 34% 和 38% 的研究对象缺失了组织学亚型数据,这可能会影响结果的可靠性。在目前的JSGS论文中,组织学亚型(胰胆管型和混合型)是与较短生存期相关的预后因素之一,但通过多变量分析并不是独立的预后因素。值得注意的是,本研究中只有三名患者缺失有关 CAV 组织学亚型的数据。在这项研究中,CAV 的治疗策略也是重点,因为侵袭性 CAV 的标准治疗策略尚未确立。本研究对 80 例接受术后辅助化疗(AC)的患者进行了分析,其中 63 例患者进行了倾向评分匹配(PSM)。结果显示,术后辅助化疗对无复发生存率无明显益处,这表明术前化疗是目前唯一能改善侵袭性 CAV 患者生存率的潜在治疗方法。基于对 PSM 结果的这种解释,作者随后探讨了本研究中发现的可能预测独立预后因素(pT ≥ 2、V+ 和/或 N+)的术前因素,这些因素与以下因素之一相关:(1)CA19-9 &gt; 37 IU/mL;(2)溃疡型或混合型外观;(3)分化良好的肿瘤除外;或(4)组织学肠亚型除外。耐人寻味的是,CA19-9 和大体外观等术前因素被识别出来,提出它们有助于在不久的将来丰富潜在的高危候选患者,以便进行术前化疗。这一发现不仅能为 JSGS 成员,也能为世界外科医生未来的 CAV 研究大纲提供很好的参考。JSGS 论文包括作者与讨论者(JSGS 委员会各分会的专家)之间的讨论。Kaido 教授和 Sho 教授指出,包括剂量强度和持续时间在内的 AC 方案是多种多样的(约 60% 的患者最常单独使用 S1),因此根据每种化疗方案检查疗效可能非常重要。然而,由于这种疾病的罕见性,这一关键问题并不容易解决。Sho 教授还对无复发生存率与总生存率的相似结果进行了技术解读,认为 AC 可能对复发没有影响。至少,与胃癌不同,本研究并未获得术后 AC 可减少 CAV 复发的确切证据。由于术前化疗方法近来在侵袭性胃肠道癌症(如食管癌4 和胃癌5 )中取得了肿瘤学上的成功,因此,就预测生存率的预后因素和术前因素达成共识可能对未来制定侵袭性 CAV 的新策略具有重要意义。Morito等人描述了IV期胃癌术前化疗和转换手术后极早期复发(VER)的临床影响。
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New era of emerging preoperative chemotherapy in gastrointestinal cancer

This issue for the first time includes a JSGS paper, selected in the AGsurg forum held in Hakodate in July 2023. The JSGS papers were selected from four separate sessions on upper GI (gastrointestinal), lower GI, HPB (hepato-biliary-pancreatic), and general surgery, from hundreds of applications, and careful, elaborate, and stepwise selection processes comprised many fruitful debates and the consensus of Japanese gastrointestinal surgeons. The initial emerging paper by Narita et al. has reported clinicopathological analysis of 460 cases of carcinoma of the ampulla of Vater (CAV) presented in Hakodate by Dr Hatano from Kyoto University, a corresponding author of this manuscript who was also awarded the AGsurg forum award in the HPB surgery session. The present study consists of a large cohort of patients with CAV as a multi-institutional study despite its rarity, and the proportion of missing data was extraordinarily small (less than 1% of study population).1

They identified six prognostic factors (age, tumor diameter, pathological T factor, portal vein invasion, venous invasion, and pathological N factor) in a multivariate analysis. The prognostic factors identified in this paper were similar with those of the previous series, but the point of remarkable difference was that histological subtype was not an independent prognostic factor. The two large retrospective multicenter cohort studies evaluated the impact of histological subtypes on prognosis in patients with CAV2, 3; however, 34% and 38% of the study subjects in each study had missing data regarding histological subtype, which could potentially affect the reliability of results. In the present JSGS paper, histological subtype (pancreatobiliary and mixed type) was one of the prognostic factors associated with shorter survival but was not an independent prognostic factor through multivariate analysis. Notably, the current study had only three patients missing data regarding histological subtypes of CAV. Importance of missing data is considered to be claimed in such delicate discussion.

In this research, therapeutic strategy for CAV was also focused on, because standard therapeutic strategy for aggressive CAV has not been established yet. The current analysis was performed out of 80 patients who received postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy (AC), where 63 patients were assigned for propensity score matching (PSM). The results showed no obvious benefit of AC on recurrence free survival, which indicated preoperative chemotherapy is the only remaining potential treatment to improve patient survival of aggressive CAV at present.

Based on such interpretation of the PSM outcomes, the authors thereafter explored preoperative factors potentially predicting the independent prognostic factors (pT ≥ 2, V+, and/or N+) identified in this study, and they were associated with one of the followings: (1) CA19-9 > 37 IU/mL, (2) ulcerative or mixed-type appearance, and (3) except for well-differentiated tumor, or (4) except for intestinal subtype of histology. Intriguingly, preoperative factors such as CA19-9 and gross appearance were identified, proposing that they can help enrich the potential high-risk candidate patients for preoperative chemotherapy in the near future. This finding can give not only the member of the JSGS but also world surgeons excellent reference for future research outline in CAV.

The JSGS paper included discussion between authors and discussants, the specialists of each session of the JSGS committee. Professor Kaido and Sho pointed out that AC regimen, including dose intensity and duration, are heterogeneous (S1 alone was the most frequently administered in about 60%), and that it may be important to examine the efficacy according to each regimen of chemotherapy. However, due to rarity of the disease, this critical issue would not be resolved so easily. Professor Sho also commented on the technical interpretation of similar results of relapse-free survival with overall survival, suggesting AC may have no impact on recurrence. At least, definite evidence that postoperative AC reduces recurrence in CAV has not been obtained in the present study differently from gastric cancer. As the preoperative approach for chemotherapy has recently gained oncological success in aggressive gastrointestinal cancers such as esophageal cancer4 and gastric cancer,5 consensus of prognostic factors and preoperative factors to predict survival may be important in the future plan for new strategies for aggressive CAV.

This issue includes three original papers describing preoperative chemotherapy in gastric cancer (Morito et al.), and colorectal cancer (Miyashita et al. and Nakagawa et al.). These papers did not describe obvious success of preoperative chemotherapy to improve survival in gastrointestinal cancer.

Morito et al. have described clinical impact of very early recurrence (VER) after preoperative chemotherapy and conversion surgery for stage IV gastric cancer. In this paper, significantly more patients had liver metastasis before initial treatment in the VER group than in the reference group, and VER patients showed the most dismal prognosis, as expected. These findings suggested that after conversion surgery of gastric cancer the VER group may exhibit similar characteristics to liver metastasis. Such clinical uniqueness may in turn be a surrogate phenotype to identify the convergent molecular features to explain chemoresistance in gastric cancer. So clinical phenotypes after neoadjuvant chemotherapy might be a promising clue for gastrointestinal surgeons fighting the most aggressive cancer in the new era.

Miyashita et al. have clarified that immune checkpoint status and oncogenic mutation profiling of rectal cancer after neoadjuvant chemotherapy (KSCC1301-A2). The effect of neoadjuvant chemotherapy has been associated with increased expression of immune checkpoint molecules, such as PD-1, and tumor infiltrating lymphocytes profiles representing high CD8/FOXP3 ratio but has not been associated with genomic alterations in new generation sequence (NGS). Therefore, rectal cancer may be expected to be susceptible to combined immunotherapy with chemotherapy. Hence, preoperative chemotherapy could be utilized even as an excellent research tool to clarify the treatment response of clinical cancer cells.

Finally, Nakagawa et al. have reported effects of neoadjuvant chemotherapy for patients with highly conditional colon cancer (obstructive cases) in multicenter propensity score-matched analysis (YCOG2101). After PSM, 5-year overall survival tended to be better in neoadjuvant cases (88.5%) than in reference (78.8%), although the difference was not significant (p = 0.09). As cancer cells are a kind of microorganism, therapy should be theoretically started in an invisible step to eradicate, and clinical experience in YCOG2101 would be precious and promising for future validation of potential success of preoperative chemotherapy for aggressive colon cancer.

The author declares no conflicts of interest for this article.

Approval of the research protocol: N/A.

Informed Consent: N/A.

Registry and the Registration No. of the study/trial: N/A.

Animal Studies: N/A.

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来源期刊
Annals of Gastroenterological Surgery
Annals of Gastroenterological Surgery GASTROENTEROLOGY & HEPATOLOGY-
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
11.10%
发文量
98
审稿时长
11 weeks
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Issue Information Issue Information Essential updates 2022/2023: A review of current topics in robotic hepatectomy Predictive factors of actual 5‐y recurrence‐free survival after upfront surgery for resectable pancreatic cancer How to measure quality of surgery as a component of multimodality treatment of gastric cancer
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