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Efficacy of Radioembolization with (166)Ho-Microspheres in Salvage Patients with Liver Metastases: A Phase 2 Study

Authors :
Prince, J.F.
Bosch, M.A. van den
Nijsen, J.F.W.
Smits, M.L.J.
Hoven, A.F. van den
Nikolakopoulos, S.
Wessels, F.J.
Bruijnen, R.C.
Braat, M.
Zonnenberg, B.A.
Lam, M.
Prince, J.F.
Bosch, M.A. van den
Nijsen, J.F.W.
Smits, M.L.J.
Hoven, A.F. van den
Nikolakopoulos, S.
Wessels, F.J.
Bruijnen, R.C.
Braat, M.
Zonnenberg, B.A.
Lam, M.
Source :
The Journal of Nuclear Medicine (1978); 582; 588; 0161-5505; 4; vol. 59; ~The Journal of Nuclear Medicine (1978)~582~588~~~0161-5505~4~59~~
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Item does not contain fulltext<br />Radioembolization of liver malignancies with (166)Ho-microspheres has been shown to be safe in a phase 1 dose-escalation study. The purpose of this study was to investigate the efficacy of (166)Ho radioembolization. Methods: In this prospective single-arm study, 56 patients were enrolled, all with liver metastases refractory to systemic therapy and ineligible for surgical resection. The primary outcome was a response by 2 target lesions on triphasic liver CT scans 3 mo after therapy, as assessed using RECIST, version 1.1. Secondary outcomes included overall tumor response, time to imaging progression, overall survival, toxicity, quality of life, and quantification of the microspheres on SPECT and MRI. Results: Between May 2012 and March 2015, 38 eligible patients were treated, one of whom was not evaluable. In 27 (73%) of 37 patients, the target lesions showed complete response, partial response, or stable disease (disease control) at 3 mo (95% confidence interval [CI], 57%-85%). The median overall survival was 14.5 mo (95% CI, 8.6-22.8 mo). For colorectal cancer patients (n = 23), the median overall survival was 13.4 mo (95% CI, 8.2-15.7 mo). Grade 3 or 4 toxic events after treatment (according to the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events, version 4.03) included abdominal pain (in 18% of patients), nausea (8%), ascites (3%), fatigue (3%), gastric stenosis (3%), hepatic failure (3%), liver abscesses (3%), paroxysmal atrial tachycardia (3%), thoracic pain (3%), upper gastrointestinal hemorrhage (3%), and vomiting (3%). On SPECT, (166)Ho could be quantified with high accuracy and precision, with a mean overestimation of 9.3% +/- 7.1% in the liver. Conclusion: Radioembolization with (166)Ho-microspheres induced a tumor response with an acceptable toxicity profile in salvage patients with liver metastases.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
The Journal of Nuclear Medicine (1978); 582; 588; 0161-5505; 4; vol. 59; ~The Journal of Nuclear Medicine (1978)~582~588~~~0161-5505~4~59~~
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1284129300
Document Type :
Electronic Resource