The investigators will conduct a prospective phase 2 study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of a modified neoadjuvant immunotherapy plus chemotherapy (one cycle of Tislelizumab monotherapy followed by four cycles of Tislelizumab plus Docetaxel, Oxaliplatin and Capecitabine) in patients with locally advanced resectable adenocarcinoma of the esophagogastric junction (AEG).
Adenocarcinoma of the esophagogastric junction (AEG) has recently garnered increasing attention as a distinct type of malignancy. The World Health Organization (WHO) defines AEG as adenocarcinoma with its center located within 5 cm above or below the esophagogastric junction, crossing or abutting this junction (PMID: 31433515). Surgery remains the primary treatment for locally advanced AEG, but numerous studies have demonstrated that multimodal therapies, such as neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy and chemotherapy, can achieve better outcomes. The CROSS study (PMID: 22646630) established neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy as the standard treatment for resectable esophageal and esophagogastric junction cancers. This trimodal approach not only significantly increased the R0 resection rate but also improved overall survival (OS). The FLOT4 study (PMID: 30982686) compared the efficacy and safety of perioperative FLOT chemotherapy with perioperative ECF chemotherapy in treating gastric cancer/AEG. The study found that the R0 resection rate was significantly higher in the FLOT group compared to the ECF/ECX group (85% vs. 78%). Patients in the FLOT group had a median OS of 50 months, compared to 35 months in the ECX/ECF group, demonstrating that intensified perioperative systemic therapy enhances neoadjuvant efficacy. Despite these advances, the overall prognosis for locally advanced AEG remains poor, with a 5-year survival rate of less than 45%. Thus, there is an urgent need for new treatment strategies to further improve perioperative chemotherapy outcomes for AEG. Currently, immunotherapy combined with chemotherapy has become the first-line standard treatment recommendation for advanced esophageal cancer/AEG (CheckMate649, PMID: 34102137; Rationale 305, PMID: 38806195). In exploring perioperative immunotherapy for AEG, results from two global Phase III randomized controlled trials (KEYNOTE-585 (PMID: 38134948) and MATTERHORN (2023 ESMO. Abstract #LBA73)) indicated that neoadjuvant immunotherapy combined with chemotherapy significantly increased the pathological complete response rate (pCR) in AEG patients compared to neoadjuvant chemotherapy alone (13% vs. 2% and 17% vs. 7%, respectively). Furthermore, the neoadjuvant immunotherapy combined with chemotherapy groups did not show an increase in adverse events during the neoadjuvant period compared to the neoadjuvant chemotherapy alone groups (64% vs. 63% and 58% vs. 56%, respectively). However, the improvement in overall survival prognosis remains insufficient, suggesting the need to further optimize neoadjuvant immunotherapy protocols to achieve better therapeutic benefits. The way for optimizing the treatment strategy for immune-chemotherapy includes the modifications of dose, drug selection, number of cycles, schedule and sequencing (PMID: 33712487). The PANDA study, initiated by Dutch researchers, is a single-arm Phase II clinical trial that enrolled 21 patients with resectable AEG (PMID: 38191613). The neoadjuvant treatment involved one induction cycle of single-agent immunotherapy (atezolizumab) followed by four cycles of sequential immunotherapy combined with DOC chemotherapy before surgery. The postoperative pCR rate was 45%, and the major pathological response (MPR) rate was 70% (13 out of 14 MPR patients achieved disease-free survival for up to four years). This study demonstrated that the initial induction with single-agent immunotherapy significantly altered the tumor immune microenvironment, inducing an immune activation state that provided a critical foundation for the efficacy of subsequent sequential immunotherapy combined with chemotherapy. The results suggest that an initial induction with single-agent immunotherapy prior to immunotherapy combining chemotherapy is a superior neoadjuvant immuno-chemotherapy strategy for resectable locally advanced AEG, warranting further exploration and validation in larger cohorts of AEG patients. However, for Asia, particularly China, given the large base of esophageal cancer cases and the rising incidence of esophageal adenocarcinoma, exploring optimal neoadjuvant treatment strategies for resectable AEG patients in China has become a critical clinical issue. This study aims to investigate the efficacy and safety of neoadjuvant immunotherapy induction followed by sequential immune-chemotherapy in patients with locally advanced AEG.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
34
Patients were treated with one cycle of Tislelizumab 200 mg monotherapy on day 1\. At 3 weeks and with intervals of 3 weeks between each cycle (weeks 3, 6, 9 and 12), patients received a total of four combination cycles consisting of Tislelizumab 200 mg, docetaxel 50 mg m-2 and oxaliplatin 100 mg m-2 intravenously at the beginning of each cycle, plus oral capecitabine 850 mg m-2 twice daily on days 1-14 of each cycle.
Shanghai Chest Hospital
Shanghai, Shanghai Municipality, China
pCR rate
The primary endpoint is a pCR rate, which is defined as the absence of any remaining tumor cells in both the main tumor and the nearby lymph nodes (ypT0N0) as per the AJCC 8th Edition TRG scoring system
Time frame: Through the study completion, an average of 12 months
MPR rate
The primary endpoint is a pCR rate, which is defined as the absence of any remaining tumor cells in both the main tumor and the nearby lymph nodes (ypT0N0) as per the AJCC 8th Edition TRG scoring system
Time frame: Through the study completion, an average of 12 months
Event-free survival (EFS)
An event-free survival (EFS) is defined as the duration from the start of treatment until disease progression/recurrence or death from any cause, whichever occurs first
Time frame: Through the study completion, an average of 36 months
Overall survival (OS)
Overall survival (OS) is defined as the time from treatment to death, regardless of disease recurrence
Time frame: Through the study completion, an average of 36 months
Adverse events and treatment-related adverse events
Including adverse events and complications. Incidence of adverse events using CTCAE 5.0; grade 3 treatment-related adverse events and higher-grade will be reported
Time frame: Through the study completion, an average of 12 months
R0 resection rate
A R0 resection rate is defined as the rate of complete tumor removal with negative resection margin microscopically
Time frame: Through the study completion, an average of 12 months
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2-year recurrence-free survival between patients with postoperative ctDNA negative and postoperative ctDNA positive
patients will have ctDNA detection at 2-4 weeks after surgery
Time frame: From the completion of surgery to the completion of the 2-year postoperative follow-up.