1. Past, present and future of adjuvant HIPEC in patients at high risk for colorectal peritoneal metastases
- Author
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Baratti, D., Sammartino, P., Kusamura, S., Deraco, M., Ansaloni, L., Asero, S., Baiocchi, G., Bagnoli, P., Cavaliere, D., Framarini, M., Cirocchi, R., Coccolini, F., Decian, F., Delrio, P., Sassaroli, C., De Simone, M., Robella, M., Vaira, M., Di Giorgio, Andrea, Fagotti, Anna, Lorusso, Domenica, Federici, O., Fiorentini, G., Fambrini, M., Scaringi, S., Garofalo, A., Valle, M., Gelmini, R., Cabry, F., Cautero, N., Sorrentino, Luca, Graziosi, L., Guaglio, M., Montenovo, M., Bartolini, V., Lippolis, P. V., Macri, A., Pasqual, E. M., Roviello, F., Marrelli, D., Orsenigo, E., Sommariva, A., Di Giorgio A., Fagotti A. (ORCID:0000-0001-5579-335X), Lorusso D., Sorrentino L., Baratti, D., Sammartino, P., Kusamura, S., Deraco, M., Ansaloni, L., Asero, S., Baiocchi, G., Bagnoli, P., Cavaliere, D., Framarini, M., Cirocchi, R., Coccolini, F., Decian, F., Delrio, P., Sassaroli, C., De Simone, M., Robella, M., Vaira, M., Di Giorgio, Andrea, Fagotti, Anna, Lorusso, Domenica, Federici, O., Fiorentini, G., Fambrini, M., Scaringi, S., Garofalo, A., Valle, M., Gelmini, R., Cabry, F., Cautero, N., Sorrentino, Luca, Graziosi, L., Guaglio, M., Montenovo, M., Bartolini, V., Lippolis, P. V., Macri, A., Pasqual, E. M., Roviello, F., Marrelli, D., Orsenigo, E., Sommariva, A., Di Giorgio A., Fagotti A. (ORCID:0000-0001-5579-335X), Lorusso D., and Sorrentino L.
- Abstract
Peritoneal metastases (PM) from colorectal cancer (CRC) still represent a huge health-care problem. Recent population-based studies report an overall 3.5–4.2% incidence of CRC-PM after potentially curative primary surgery [1,2]. These rates can reach up to about 25% in locally advanced CRC penetrating visceral peritoneum (pT4a), or directly infiltrating surrounding organs (pT4b) [[1], [2], [3]]. Accordingly, the peritoneum is one of the most common site of metastatic spread for CRC, following the liver and lung, even though incidences may be likely underestimated because PM are more difficult to detect than liver or lung metastases. A strategy involving local-regionally delivered chemotherapy to prevent the outgrowth of occult peritoneal seeding into macroscopic metastases is supported by a strong rationale: first, cytoreductve surgery (CRS) combined with hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotheray (HIPEC) improve CRC-PM survival, but most patients are not suitable for this demanding treatment due to extensive peritoneal involvement, systemic metastases, and/or poor clinical conditions. Second, CRS/HIPEC is maximally effective and safe when small-volume disease is treated. Third, in the palliative setting, modern systemic chemotherapy (s-CT) and targeted agents appear to be less effective for peritoneal metastatic CRC than non-peritoneal metastatic CRC. Finally, the absence of symptoms, as well as current limitations of imaging, hamper early diagnosis and treatment [3]. On these bases, the use of HIPEC for the prevention or early treatment of CRC-PM has been tested at different time-points, either simultaneously with primary surgery [[3], [4], [5]], at the time of second-look surgery after adjuvant s-CT [6], or as a staged procedure at 5–8 weeks postoperatively [7]. Since we were amongst the first groups to investigate the role of adjuvant HIPEC, we were surprised to read that in the COLOPEC randomized trial such a treatment approach failed to demonstrate improved peri
- Published
- 2020