Cholangiocarcinoma Clinical Trial
Official title:
Radiofrequency Ablation Plus Stenting Versus Stenting Alone for Treatment of Malignant Biliary Obstruction
Pancreatic cancer and cholangiocarcinoma are the most common causes of malignant biliary
obstruction. They are diseases of increasing incidence and unfavorable prognosis. Only a
minority of patients have a localized disease and are indicated for surgery with a chance of
long-term survival. Locally advanced and metastatic tumors are treated with palliative
chemotherapy or chemoradiotherapy; the results of such treatments are unsatisfactory. The
average survival of patients with unresectable disease is 6 months and only 5 - 10 % of
patients survive 5 years. Chemotherapy and radiotherapy can be used, however only with a
palliative effect. Biliary drainage is an integral part of palliative treatment.
Endoscopically or percutaneously placed stents improve quality of life, decrease cholestasis
and pruritus, but do not significantly improve survival. Biliary stents get occluded over
time, possibly resulting in acute cholangitis and require repeated replacement. Endoluminal
biliary photodynamic therapy (PDT) and radiofrequency ablation (RFA), locally active
endoscopic methods, have been increasingly used in recent years in palliative treatment of
patients with malignant biliary obstruction. In photodynamic therapy, improved survival has
been shown in two randomized controlled trials; however the technique suffers from technical
complexity, high cost and low availability. In RFA, application of low voltage high
frequency current during radiofrequency ablation results in tissue destruction by heat. Its
antitumor effect may also be related to systemic changes in antitumor immunity. The use of
endoluminal biliary RFA has so far been reported only in small retrospective cohorts of
patients.
The aim of this randomized study is to compare efficacy of RFA plus stenting to stenting
alone in palliative treatment of malignant biliary obstruction with survival as primary
outcome. Secondary outcomes are stent patency, immediate and late complications, quality of
life and effects on anti-tumor immunity in the RFA group.
Cholangiocarcinoma and pancreatic cancer are by far the two most common causes of malignant
bile duct obstruction. Cholangiocarcinoma is an adenocarcinoma originating in the bile duct
whereas pancreatic cancer is an adenocarcinoma derived from pancreatic ductal cells. The
incidence rates of both diseases have been rising over the past decades. Both diseases still
have a very unfavorable prognosis with 5 year survival rates as low as 5-10%. Surgery
represents the only therapeutic modality with a curative potential, however most patients
are non-eligible for surgical treatment at the time of diagnosis. Patients present with
either distant metastases, have a locally advanced disease or are unfit for surgery because
of advanced age and/or co-morbidities. The prognosis of patients with unresectable bile duct
or pancreatic cancer is poor with a median survival time of about 6 months. Chemotherapy and
radiotherapy provide only a slight survival benefit and thus have only palliative intent.
Most patients with cholangiocarcinoma and pancreatic cancer present with bile duct
obstruction in the course of their disease. Bile duct obstruction relief is an important
part of palliation therapy. Endoscopic retrograde cholangiography with bile duct stenting is
the method of choice with a high rate of technical success and a lower complication rate
compared to surgery. Biliary stents are either plastic or metal (self-expandable metal
stents, SEMS). SEMS can be covered, uncovered or partially covered. Plastic stents are
cheaper and easier to exchange but have a shorter patency compared to metal stents. Metal
stents have been shown to improve survival of patients with proximal malignant biliary
obstruction. Both plastic and metal become occluded in a significant proportion of patients,
especially in those with a longer life expectancy. Stent occlusion is often an acute event
leading to sepsis and a prompt intervention is required. Failure of achieving adequate
drainage may result in severe cholangitis and death.
Photodynamic therapy has been used for bile duct tumor ablation for more than a decade. It
is a two stage process in which a photosensitizing agent is taken by the tumor tissue and is
than activated by light of a specific wave length. Two randomized trials showed improved
survival of patients treated with PDT plus stenting compared to stenting alone. However,
side effects of photodynamic therapy such as phototoxicity, high costs and limited
availability restrict the use of PDT.
Radiofrequency ablation (RFA), by means of alternating high-frequency current, generates
heat that results in coagulation necrosis of tissue. It is widely used to treat liver tumors
or dysplastic Barrett's esophagus. Endoluminal biliary RFA has become possible upon
availability of narrow ERCP RFA catheters and represents a new modality of intraductal tumor
ablation. The probe can be introduced over a 0.035-inch wire through a standard endoscope,
thus allowing endoscopic ablation of malignant bile duct obstruction. The bipolar catheter
has multiple circumferential electrodes at the distal tip. The coagulative effect is
delivered in the area between the two electrodes.
A few human non-randomized case series investigating the safety and efficiency of RFA were
reported. Steel at al reported their results in 22 patients with malignant bile duct
obstruction (16 patients with pancreatic cancer and 6 patients with cholangiocarcinoma).
Immediate, 30 day complication rates and 90 day stent patency were evaluated as primary
parameters. Intraductal RFA was followed by a SEMS placement. One patient developed
asymptomatic elevation of amylase, one patients developed rigors and two patients developed
cholecystitis requiring cholecystectomy. All except 3 patients achieved 90 day stent
patency.
In a recent study of Sharaiha et al, 26 patients with pancreatic or bile duct cancer
underwent RFA followed by plastic or metal stent placement. They were compared to 40 matched
controls who underwent only stenting. Technical success rate was 100%. Multivariable Cox
proportional regression analysis showed RFA to be an independent predictor of survival [HR
0.29 (0.11-0.76), p = 0.012] together with age and receipt of chemotherapy [HR 1.04
(1.01-1.07), p = 0.011; HR 0.26 (0.10-0.70), p = 0.007]. Surprisingly, SEMS patency rates
were the same across all groups.
In an Austrian national retrospective study, 84 ablations were performed in 58 patients in
11 centers. Cholangiocarcinoma was present in 45 patients. Technical feasibility was 100%,
however multiple complications occurred (1 liver infarct, 5 cholangitis, 3 hemobilia, 2
sepsis, 1 gall-bladder empyema, 1 liver coma).
RFA was also investigated in pancreatic cancers only. In a retrospective comparison of 23
patients and 46 controls, the median survival was better in the RFA group (226 vs. 123 days,
p=0,01). The median stent patency was not different.
The safety profile of RFA seems to be acceptable, however severe complications have occured.
In the study of Tal et al, 3 cases of bleeding were reported, two of them resulted in death.
In all of these patients, plastic stents were used.
Increasing evidence indicates that RFA might stimulate anti-tumor immunity. Active
anti-cancer immune responses depend on efficient presentation of tumor antigens and
cytokine-mediated stimulatory signaling. Tumor cells are generally regarded as poor
stimulators of T-cells. In contrast, antigen-presenting cells (APCs) are highly specialized
in this function and are therefore important in the process of stimulation of T-cell
responses to tumors. RFA has been shown to stimulate anti-tumor immunity through the
induction of heat shock proteins, especially HSP 70. HSPs have the capacity to affect the
immunogenicity of tumor cells, to chaperone antigenic peptides and deliver them into APCs,
thus activate and regulate innate and adaptive immunity.
Based on the available evidence, RFA seems to be a technically feasible technique of
malignant bile duct stricture ablation with a favorable safety profile. Retrospective case
series have reported improved stent patency and survival in cholangiocarcinoma and
pancreatic cancer patients following RFA. Thus, endoluminal RFA may represent a novel
treatment modality in patients with malignant biliary obstruction. For this to happen,
however, prospectively obtained comparative data with established treatment, i.e. biliary
stenting, regarding safety and efficiency are necessary.
The investigators aim to compare endoscopic radiofrequency ablation plus stenting vs.
stenting alone for malignant bile duct obstruction not eligible for surgical resection in a
randomized controlled trial.
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