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Chemotherapy (doublet or triplet) plus targeted therapy by RAS status as conversion therapy in colorectal cancer patients with initially unresectable liver-only metastases. The UNICANCER PRODIGE-14 randomised clinical trial

Authors :
Marc Ychou
Michel Rivoire
Simon Thezenas
Rosine Guimbaud
Francois Ghiringhelli
Anne Mercier-Blas
Laurent Mineur
Eric Francois
Faiza Khemissa
Marion Chauvenet
Reza Kianmanesh
Marianne Fonck
Philippe Houyau
Thomas Aparicio
Marie-Pierre Galais
Franck Audemar
Eric Assenat
Evelyne Lopez-Crapez
Claire Jouffroy
Antoine Adenis
René Adam
Olivier Bouché
Source :
Br J Cancer
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Colorectal cancer (CRC) patients have a better prognosis if metastases are resectable. Initially, unresectable liver-only metastases can be converted to resectable with chemotherapy plus a targeted therapy. We assessed which of chemotherapy doublet (2-CTx) or triplet (3-CTx), combined with targeted therapy by RAS status, would be better in this setting. METHODS: PRODIGE 14 was an open-label, multicenter, randomised Phase 2 trial. CRC patients with initially defined unresectable liver-only metastases received either, 2-CTx (FOLFOX or FOLFIRI) or 3-CTx (FOLFIRINOX), plus bevacizumab/cetuximab by RAS status. The primary endpoint was to increase the R0/R1 liver-resection rate from 50 to 70% with the 3-CTx. RESULTS: Patients (n = 256) were mainly men with an ECOG PS of 0, and a median age of 60 years. In total, 109 patients (42.6%) had RAS-mutated tumours. After a median follow-up of 45.6 months, the R0/R1 liver-resection rate was 56.9% (95% CI: 48–66) with the 3-CTx versus 48.4% (95% CI: 39–57) with the 2-CTx (P = 0.17). Median overall survival was 43.4 months with 3-CTx versus 40 months with 2-CTx. CONCLUSION: We failed to increase from 50 to 70% the R0/R1 liver-resection rate with the use of 3-CTx combined with bevacizumab or cetuximab by RAS status in CRC patients with initially unresectable liver metastases.

Details

ISSN :
15321827 and 00070920
Volume :
126
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
British Journal of Cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fdd537cf355d1c744f41f3d570c5fdf7