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Adjuvant chemoradiotherapy and chemotherapy in resectable pancreatic cancer: a randomised controlled trial
Author(s): Neoptolemos JP, Dunn JA, Stocken DD, Almond J, Link K, Beger H, Bassi C, Falconi M, Pederzoli P, Dervenis C, Fernandez-Cruz L, Lacaine F, Pap A, Spooner D, Kerr DJ, Friess H, Buchler MW
Source: LANCET    Volume: 358    Issue: 9293    Pages: 1576-1585    Published: NOV 10 2001  
Times Cited: 273     References: 30     
Abstract: Background The role of adjuvant treatment in pancreatic cancer remains uncertain. The European Study Group for Pancreatic Cancer (ESPAC) assessed the roles of chemoradiotherapy and chemotherapy in a randomised study.

Methods After resection, patients were randomly assigned to adjuvant chemoradiotherapy (20 Gy in ten daily fractions over 2 weeks with 500 mg/m(2) fluorouracil intravenously on days 1-3, repeated after 2 weeks) or chemotherapy (intravenous fluorouracil 425 mg/m(2) and folinic acid 20 mg/m(2) daily for 5 days, monthly for 6 months). Clinicians could randomise patients into a two-by-two factorial design (observation, chemoradiotherapy alone, chemotherapy alone, or both) or into one of the main treatment comparisons (chemoradiotherapy versus no chemoradiotherapy or chemotherapy versus no chemotherapy). The primary endpoint was death, and all analyses were by intention to treat.

Findings 541 eligible patients with pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma were randomised: 285 in the two-by-two factorial design (70 chemoradiotherapy, 74 chemotherapy, 72 both, 69 observation); a further 68 patients were randomly assigned chemoradiotherapy or no chemoradiotherapy and 188 chemotherapy or no chemotherapy. Median follow-up of the 227 (42%) patients still alive was 10 months (range 0-62). Overall results showed no benefit for adjuvant chemoradiotherapy (median survival 15.5 months in 175 patients with chemoradiotherapy vs 16.1 months in 178 patients without; hazard ratio 1.18 [95% CI 0.90-1-55], p=0.24). There was evidence of a survival benefit for adjuvant chemotherapy (median survival 19.7 months in 238 patients with chemotherapy vs 14.0 months in 235 patients without; hazard ratio 0.66 [0.52-0.83], p=0.0005).

Interpretation This study showed no survival benefit for adjuvant chemoradiotherapy but revealed a potential benefit for adjuvant chemotherapy, justifying further randomised controlled trials of adjuvant chemotherapy in pancreatic cancer.

Document Type: Article
Language: English
Reprint Address: Neoptolemos, JP (reprint author), Univ Liverpool, Dept Surg, 5th Floor UCD Bldg, Liverpool L69 3GA, Merseyside England
Addresses:
1. Univ Liverpool, Dept Surg, Liverpool L69 3GA, Merseyside England
2. Univ Birmingham, Inst Canc Studies, Canc Res Campaign Trials Unit, Birmingham, W Midlands England
3. Univ Hosp Surg, Ulm, Germany
4. Univ Verona, Dept Surg, I-37100 Verona, Italy
5. Agia Olga Hosp, Dept Surg, Athens, Greece
6. Barcelona Univ Hosp, Barcelona, Spain
7. Hop Tenon, Serv Chirurg Digest & Gen, F-75970 Paris, France
8. Mav Hosp, Dept Gastroenterol, Budapest, Hungary
9. Queen Elizabeth Hosp, Dept Radiotherapy, Birmingham B15 2TH, W Midlands England
10. Univ Bern, Dept Visceral & Transplantat Surg, Bern, Switzerland
Publisher: LANCET LTD, 84 THEOBALDS RD, LONDON WC1X 8RR, ENGLAND
Subject Category: Medicine, General & Internal
IDS Number: 492VM
ISSN: 0140-6736
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