Colorectal Neoplasms Clinical Trial
Official title:
Hepatic Arterial Infusion PUMP Chemotherapy Combined With systemIc chemoTherapy for Potentially Resectable Colorectal Liver Metastases: The PUMP-IT Study.
The PUMP-IT study is designed to prove the feasibility of HAIP chemotherapy with concomitant standard systemic chemotherapy (FOLFOX and FOLFIRI) in the Netherlands. This study will include patients with both unresectable CRLM and resectable CRLM with an indication for upfront systemic therapy (further referred to as potentially resectable CRLM), without extrahepatic metastases. The study will be performed in two tertiary referral centers in the Netherlands.
RATIONALE - Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the third most common cancer with an annual incidence
of 14.000 patients in the Netherlands. Of all patients with metastases, 32% have isolated
colorectal liver metastases (CRLM). Local treatment of CRLM, i.e. resection, ablation and/or
stereotactic radiotherapy, is the only potentially curative option. Unfortunately over 75% of
these patients have CRLM which are (initially) not suitable for such local treatment.
Current treatment of unresectable CRLM includes subsequent lines of systemic (chemo)therapy
aiming to convert the CRLM from an unresectable to a resectable or local treatable state in
order to prolong survival. Conversion rates of modern first line systemic chemotherapeutic
regimens, as described in multiple retrospective studies with highly selected patients, are
observed in 10-76% of patients, resulting in a 5-year survival of 33-43% after conversion.
Patients with progressive disease on first line therapy are offered second line systemic
therapy. Conversion during second line systemic therapy is rare and described in only 7-13.5%
of patients. These patients have a poor prognosis with a median OS of approximately 10-15
months. However, overall survival (OS) of patients undergoing local treatment after
conversion on second line systemic therapy is comparable to what is observed after conversion
on first line systemic therapy.
Hepatic arterial infusion pump (HAIP) can deliver high-dose regional chemotherapy to the CRLM
using their unique arterial blood supply. Floxuridine is used for HAIP chemotherapy because
of the advantages of having a half-life of ten minutes, a 95% first-pass effect and allowing
high intrahepatic dosing resulting in increased hepatic exposure by a factor 400, with
minimal systemic exposure (e.g. complications). These specific properties of HAIP
chemotherapy make it possible to combine high-dose local HAIP therapy with standard of care
systemic therapy.
Several single center studies from Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (MSKCC) (New York,
USA) have shown high response rates with HAIP chemotherapy in combination with systemic
therapy for unresectable CRLM. Conversion to resection of the initially unresectable CRLM
have been observed in up to 57% of chemo-naïve patients and in 20%-38% of patients with prior
systemic therapy treated with the combination of HAIP and systemic therapy. Irrespective of
conversion, the combined therapy resulted in a median OS of 50.8-76.6 months and a 5-year OS
of 51.9% for chemo-naïve patients. The median and 5-year OS was 27.7-35 months and 27.9%,
respectively, for patients who have been treated with systemic therapy before.
Although these results are impressive, they come from a single center and have not yet been
confirmed elsewhere. Most important reasons were the technically challenging surgical
procedure of HAIP implantation and the need for stringent monitoring and specific management
of HAIP chemotherapy requiring a highly skilled multidisciplinary treatment team.
A study investigating combined treatment is required to prove feasibility in a multicenter
setting outside MSKCC before a multicenter randomized phase III trial can be initiated in the
Netherlands.
STUDY DESIGN - All eligible patients who signed informed consent (registration) and meet all
inclusion criteria (inclusion) will undergo surgical HAIP implantation. HAIP function is
evaluated with a perfusion test during surgery and postoperatively before starting drug
treatment. Start of combined HAIP chemotherapy and systemic chemotherapy is aimed within 6
weeks postoperatively. Clinical and laboratory evaluations and chemotherapy administration
are scheduled every two weeks. Response evaluations will be conducted with CT thorax/abdomen
and CEA measurement every 2 HAIP cycles (every 4 systemic chemotherapy cycles) during
combined therapy.
The combined therapy cycles are continued until disease progression, severe toxicity, CRLM
conversion to surgical local treatment or patients withdrawal. After HAIP chemotherapy
discontinuation, treatment and/or follow-up are according to standard clinical practice.
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