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Clinical Trial Results

Summaries of Newsworthy Clinical Trial Results

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    Posted: 07/09/2007
Related Pages
Search for Clinical Trials 1
NCI's PDQ® Cancer Clinical Trials Registry.

Stomach (Gastric) Cancer Home Page 2
NCI's gateway for information about stomach (gastric) cancer.

Highlights from ASCO 2007 3
A collection of links to material summarizing some of the important clinical trial results announced at the 2007 annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO).
Chemotherapy Before Surgery May Increase Survival in Stomach Cancer

Key Words

Stomach (gastric) cancer, esophagogastric junction. (Definitions of many terms related to cancer can be found in the Cancer.gov Dictionary 4.)

Summary

Confirming findings from an earlier study, chemotherapy given before surgery for cancer of the lower esophagus and stomach increased the number of patients surviving for five years compared to surgery alone. Those receiving chemotherapy also had better disease-free survival, and the side effects from the treatment were considered manageable.

Source

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) annual meeting, Chicago, June 3, 2007 (see the meeting abstract 5).

Background

Surgery is usually the primary treatment for adenocarcinoma arising in the area of the digestive system which includes the stomach, the lower esophagus leading into the stomach, and the part where they meet (the esophagogastric junction). But surgery alone doesn’t produce many cures because by the time the disease is diagnosed in most patients, it has already spread into adjacent tissues and organs or to more distant sites in the body. The chances of surviving five years after surgery range from 5 to 30 percent, and thus researchers are actively looking for additional treatment strategies.

In 2001, a large, randomized, U.S. Intergroup phase III clinical trial showed that the risk of death was significantly reduced in stomach (gastric) cancer patients who received adjuvant (after surgery) chemotherapy along with radiation therapy. In 2006, the European MAGIC phase III clinical trial (http://www.cancer.gov/clinicaltrials/results/MAGIC-gastric0706) showed that combination chemotherapy using epirubicin, cisplatin, and 5-fluorouracil (ECF), given both before and after surgery (perioperative), also reduced the risk of death compared with surgery alone.

The French clinical trial described below was similar to MAGIC, except that patients were randomally assigned either to surgery alone or to chemotherapy before surgery (preoperative); also, the chemotherapy combination was CF only, without epirubicin.

The Study

Between 1995 and 2003, investigators enrolled 224 stomach cancer patients from 25 centers throughout France in this phase III clinical trial. All patients had adenocarcinoma, stage II or higher. The cancer occurred in the lower third of the esophagus (11 percent), at the esophagogastric junction (64 percent), or in the stomach itself (25 percent). Patients averaged 63 years of age, and most were men. Stomach cancer occurs twice as often in men as in women.

Patients were randomly assigned to receive either surgery or preoperative chemotherapy followed by surgery. The preoperative chemotherapy-plus-surgery group received cisplatin in combination with a continuous infusion of 5-fluorouracil. Surgery followed within four to six weeks.

After surgery about half of the preoperative chemotherapy group – mainly those whose disease responded to, or remained stable with, preoperataive chemotherapy and who tolerated it well – also received up to four more cycles of the same regimen after surgery (post-operative chemotherapy). Those receiving surgery alone had no post-operative treatment.

Valérie Boige, M.D., was the lead author for the study (the ACCORD 07-FFCD 9703 trial) which was coordinated by the Fédérale Nationale des Centres de Lutte Contre Le Cancer (FNLCC), based in Paris.

Results

Patients were followed for a median of 5.7 years. The five-year overall survival rate for those treated with surgery alone was 24 percent, compared to 38 percent for those who also received preoperative chemotherapy-plus-surgery, a risk reduction of 31 percent. After five years, 34 percent of the preoperative chemotherapy-plus-surgery group were disease free, compared to 21 percent for the surgery-alone group, which amounted to a 35 percent reduction in risk.

Side effects of the preoperative chemotherapy included one treatment-related death, a significant drop in white blood cells in 20 percent of patients, and fairly severe nausea and/or vomiting in nine percent. Altogether, 37 percent of those receiving preoperative chemotherapy had one or more severe side effects.

Comments

Confirming the results of the MAGIC trial, the French study makes “clear that surgery alone for these patients is not enough,” said David H. Ilson, M.D., Ph.D., of the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, in a discussion of the results at the ASCO meeting. He noted that significantly more patients who had chemotherapy prior to surgery went on to have successful surgery.

Limitations

Although the French trial described here was designed to test the benefit of preoperative chemotherapy, a significant number of patients also received chemotherapy after surgery. The earlier MAGIC trial was designed to test the benefit of chemotherapy given both before and after surgery.

"The designs of both [the French and MAGIC] trials makes it hard to know exactly how much each part of the perioperative approach is contributing to the results,” noted Margaret Mooney, M.D., of the National Cancer Institute’s Cancer Therapy Evaluation Program. She and Ilson look forward to trials now underway in Europe that will make sharper comparisons between all of the components.

In addition, they said, more must be learned about whether chemotherapy, both before and after surgery (the European approach) or chemotherapy plus radiotherapy after surgery (the U.S. approach) works best.



Glossary Terms

adenocarcinoma (A-den-oh-KAR-sih-NOH-muh)
Cancer that begins in cells that line certain internal organs and that have gland-like (secretory) properties.
cisplatin (sis-PLA-tin)
A drug used to treat many types of cancer. Cisplatin contains the metal platinum. It kills cancer cells by damaging their DNA and stopping them from dividing. Cisplatin is a type of alkylating agent. Also called Platinol.
continuous infusion (kon-TIN-yoo-us in-FYOO-zhun)
The administration of a fluid into a blood vessel, usually over a prolonged period of time.
disease-free survival (dih-ZEEZ... ser-VY-vul)
The length of time after treatment for a specific disease during which a patient survives with no sign of the disease. Disease-free survival may be used in a clinical study or trial to help measure how well a new treatment works. Also called DFS and disease-free survival time.
epirubicin (EP-ih-ROO-bih-sin)
A drug used together with other drugs to treat early breast cancer that has spread to lymph nodes. It is also being studied in the treatment of other types of cancer. Epirubicin is a type of anthracycline antibiotic. Also called Ellence and epirubicin hydrochloride.
esophagus (ee-SAH-fuh-gus)
The muscular tube through which food passes from the throat to the stomach.
fluorouracil (floor-oh-YOOR-uh-sil)
A drug used to treat symptoms of cancer of the colon, breast, stomach, and pancreas. It is also used in a cream to treat certain skin conditions. Fluorouracil stops cells from making DNA and it may kill cancer cells. It is a type of antimetabolite. Also called 5-fluorouracil and 5-FU.
median
A statistics term. The middle value in a set of measurements.
phase III trial
A study to compare the results of people taking a new treatment with the results of people taking the standard treatment (for example, which group has better survival rates or fewer side effects). In most cases, studies move into phase III only after a treatment seems to work in phases I and II. Phase III trials may include hundreds of people.
stomach (STUH-muk)
An organ that is part of the digestive system. The stomach helps digest food by mixing it with digestive juices and churning it into a thin liquid.
white blood cell
A type of immune cell. Most white blood cells are made in the bone marrow and are found in the blood and lymph tissue. White blood cells help the body fight infections and other diseases. Granulocytes, monocytes, and lymphocytes are white blood cells. Also called leukocyte and WBC.


Table of Links

1http://www.cancer.gov/clinicaltrials/search
2http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/types/stomach
3http://www.cancer.gov/asco2007/highlights
4http://www.cancer.gov/dictionary
5http://www.asco.org/portal/site/ASCO/menuitem.34d60f5624ba07fd506fe310ee37a01d/
?vgnextoid=76f8201eb61a7010VgnVCM100000ed730ad1RCRD&vmview=abst_detail_view&con
fID=47&abstractID=33499