The prognosis of peritoneal metastases from colorectal cancer has recently improved with cytoreductive surgery and hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC). Although outcomes are further improved when early stage peritoneal metastases are treated, adjuvant HIPEC has not yet been thoroughly addressed. This prospective pilot study assessed feasibility, safety and efficacy of HIPEC performed simultaneously with primary curative surgery in colorectal cancer patients with primary tumor-related risk-factors for the development of metachronous peritoneal metastases.
BACKGROUND Peritoneal surfaces are the second most common site of disease progression for colorectal cancer (CRC), following liver metastases. Historically, prognosis of CRC peritoneal metastases (PM) was only about 6 months with palliative systemic chemotherapy or supportive care. Survival improvements have been reported with cytoreductive surgery and hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (CRS/HIPEC). However, CRS/HIPEC is more effective and safe when early-stage CRC-PM are treated and most patients are not suitable for CRS/HIPEC, due to extensive peritoneal and/or systemic disease. Also, in the palliative setting, modern systemic therapies appear to be less effective for PM, than non-PM metastatic CRC and absence of symptoms and current limitations of imaging hamper early diagnosis and treatment of PM. These points would support the use of adjuvant HIPEC to prevent the outgrowth of occult peritoneal seeding into macroscopic disease. STUDY DESIGN This tudy to assesses feasibility and safety of an integrated approach of curative surgery and adjuvant HIPEC performed at the same time as primary surgery in patients with primary CRC at high risk for the development of metachronous PM. Patients are prospectively selected on the base of preoperative clinical and radiological work-up. At surgery, careful exploration of all peritoneal the cavity, and intra-operative pathological examination are carried out to confirm clinical-pathological risk-factors for PM development Standard adjuvant systemic chemotherapy is intended in the postoperative setting. A matched control group will be selected among patients with colorectal cancer undergoing curative surgery and standard adjuvant systemic chemotherapy at the same institution and during the same period. STUDY POPULATION Patients with colorectal cancer undergoing intentionally curative resection for primary tumors infiltrating the visceral serosa (T4a) or directly invading adjacent organs (T4b), with positive peritoneal washing cytology or resected ovarian or minimal peritoneal metastases. INTERVENTION Adjuvant HIPEC procedure is performed under general anaesthesia after the completion of the surgical procedures. Colon resections for primary tumors are performed according to the oncologic principles of adequate lymph-adenectomy.Greater and lesser omentectomy and adhesiolysis (if necessary) are performed routinely to ensure optimal perfusion during the HIPEC. Tumor deposits on visceral and parietal surfaces are surgically removed by formal peritonectomy procedures and/or organ resections, as needed. HIPEC is performed with cisplatin (25 mg/m2/l of perfusate) and mitomycin-C (3•3 mg/m2/l of perfusate) at 42•5°C for 60 minutes according to the closed-abdomen .technique. OUTCOMES Primary end-point is the sensitivity and false positive rate of preoperative/intraoperative assessment of primary tumor-related risk-factors for the development of peritoneal metastases in patients with colorectal cancer undergoing curative surgery..Secondary endpoints are number of participants with adverse events as a measure of safety and tolerability, Cumulative incidence of PM, overall and progression-free survival are assessed in comparison with matched controls.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
20
Closed-abdomen HIPEC with cisplatin (25 mg/m2/l of perfusate) and mitomycin-C (3•3 mg/m2/l of perfusate) at 42•5°C for 60 minutes. Perfusate volume: 4-6 l.
Colon resections for primary tumors were performed according to the oncologic principles of adequate lymph-adenectomy. Complete adhesiolysis, resection of falciform hepatic ligament, greater and lesser omentectomy were performed in all patients to ensure optimal perfusion during the HIPEC. Tumor deposits on visceral and parietal surfaces were surgically removed by formal peritonectomy procedures and/or organ resections, as needed.
Positive predictive value of preoperative/intraoperative assessment of primary tumor-related risk factors for the development of metachronous peritoneal metastases in patients undergoing curative surgery for colorectal cancer.
The presence versus absence of primary tumor-related risk-factors for the development of metachronous peritoneal metastases, as assessed during the preoperative/intraoperative phase, is compared with the findings of the pathological examination of surgical specimens.
Time frame: The primary outcome measure is assessed at an average of one week after the operation, at the time the pathological examination of surgical specimens is expected to be completed.
Number of patients with postoperative treatment-related adverse events.
All-type adverse events occurring within 60 days from surgery and adjuvant HIPEC (including surgical complications and systemic toxicities) will be recorded and graded according to the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events of the National Institute of Health (version 4.0).
Time frame: 60 days
Peritoneal progression-free survival
Peritoneal progression-free survival is calculated from the day of surgery and HIPEC to the date of death for any cause, or first recurrence involving the peritoneum..
Time frame: 36 months
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