53
Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective SpR Teaching Dec 2012 Erica Beaumont

Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

  • Upload
    toya

  • View
    60

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective. SpR Teaching Dec 2012 Erica Beaumont. Summary. Neoadjuvant Radiotherapy for rectal cancer Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy for colon cancer Adjuvant chemotherapy Liver metastases Palliative treatments. The MDT. Neoadjuvant Radiotherapy. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Colorectal CancerAn oncologists perspective

SpR Teaching Dec 2012Erica Beaumont

Page 2: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Summary

• Neoadjuvant Radiotherapy for rectal cancer• Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy for colon cancer• Adjuvant chemotherapy• Liver metastases• Palliative treatments

Page 3: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

The MDT

Page 4: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Neoadjuvant Radiotherapy

• Operable rectal cancer (SCPRT)

• Inoperable / threatened CRM (CRT)

• Modern Context– MRI staging– TME

Page 5: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

• Gina Brown et al. Radiol 1999;211:215-222

• MERCURY study gp. Diagnostic accuracy of preop MRI in prediciting curative

resection of rectal cancer: prospective observational study. BMJ 2006; 333: 779

Page 6: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

MERCURY Study

• 428 pts

• MRI mesorectal fascia involvement by tumour significantly predicted for local recurrence

• DFS and OS showed that avoidance of preop RT safe in patients with MRI defined good prognosis disease (3% local recurrence)

• Allows stratification of patients and better targeting of preoperative radiotherapy for reduced patient toxicity and morbidity

• Phase II/III trials to identification of key imaging predictors of patients at risk of developing metastatic disease on initial staging

MERCURY staging study in rectal cancer Bmj, 2006; Salerno,Daniels et al. Dis Colon Rectum, 2009).

Page 7: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

TME Surgery

• Total mesorectal excision reduces local recurrence rates

• 30-40% without TME, 3.7% with TME  

• TME varies between surgeons (experience, training technique )

• How can oncologists assess quality of surgery? Surgeons objectively assess Sx?

Heald Lancet 1986;  1(8496):1479-82Heald Lancet 1993;  341(8843):457-60 

Page 8: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Quality of Surgery

• Quirke

– Raised awareness of importance the circumferential resection margin and quality of TME specimen

– Developed graded assessment of TME

– Used in Dutch study & CR07

Page 9: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Quality of TME in Dutch Study

Page 10: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Influence of quality of TME surgery

Page 11: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Quality of TME and outcome CR07

3 yr LR 3 yr DFS

Plane of Sx N Pre Post HR Pre Post HR

Musc prop 141 9% 29% 2.76 79% 65% 1.75

Intra meso 382 6% 12% 2.02 78% 75% 1.13

Mesorectal 596 1% 6% 4.47 87% 80% 1.53

Page 12: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Potential benefits of neoadjuvant RT

• Improving survival• Reducing risk of local recurrence• Improving the chance of sphincter

saving surgery• Increasing the chance of complete

resection in advanced disease

Page 13: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Post Op RT

• Decrease rel risk LR by 30-40%

• Absolute decrease 25.8% vs 16.7% (p<0.00002)

• Rectal cancer † decreases by 8.6%

*Lancet Meta-analysis 2001. CRC collaborative gp. >2000 pts 8 post op RCTs

Page 14: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Pre op RT

• >6000 pts 14 RCTs

• Decrease relative risk LR of 50-60%

• Absolute decrease 22.2% vs 12.5% (p< 0.00001)

• Rectal cancer † decrease by 22%

Lancet meta-analysis 2001

Page 15: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Short Course Preoperative RTSCPRT

Page 16: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

SCPRT – Swedish studies

• >1100 pts with resectable rectal Ca Sx vs RT 25/5 + Sx (1986-1990)

– Not TME– 25/5#/1W– 5 yr LR 27% vs 12% – 5 yr OS 48% vs 58% – Only pre op study showing survival benefit – Benefits maintained - most recent update JCO 2005

Swedish Rectal Cancer Trial. N Engl J Med 1997; 336: 980-7

Page 17: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

SCPRT – Dutch study

• Sx vs preop RT 25/5 + Sx in operable Rectal cancer

• 1748 pts underwent complete resection• 2yr LR 8.2% vs 2.4% *

• Longer FU relative benefit maintained• Also assessed importance of CRM and quality of

surgery* *

* Kapiteijn et al. Preop RT combined with TME for resectable rectal cancer. NEJM 2001; 345: 638

* * Nagtegaal et al. Dutch CCG co-operative. Macroscopic evaluation of rectal cancer specimen. 2002; 20: 1729

Page 18: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Risk factors for LR

Page 19: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Influence of CRM on LR & OS

• A – LR with AR• B – LR with APR• C – OS with AR• D – OS with APR

Grey = CRM -

Black = CRM +

Page 20: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Low rectal cancers have worse outcomes

APR v AR in Dutch study

• OS– 38.5% v 57.6% (p=0.008)

• CRM+– 30.4% v 10.7% (p=0.002)

• Perforation rate– 13.7% v 2.5% (p<0.001)

Page 21: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

SCPRT – CR07

• SCPRT vs selective post op CRT with TME Sx• 1350 pts

– 674 25/5 SCPRT– 676 Sx alone of whom 11% CRM +

• 3 yr LR 4.7% v 11.1% (HR 2.47, 95% CI 1.61-3.79)

• 3 yr DFS 79.5% v 74.9% (HR 1.31, 95% CI 1.02-1.67)

• Benefit consistent for all levels & stages

JCO 2006 ASCO Proceedings Part I. Vol 24; No. 18S: 3511

Page 22: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Side effects of SCPRT

• Minimal acute toxicity

• Poor wound healing (esp perineal)

• Bowel dysfunction – faecal incontinence

• Less of a problem for patients post APR

Page 23: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Who should have SCPRT?

• To reduce local recurrence in:

– Low rectal cancers (APR)– Bulky T3– Node positive disease

Page 24: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Long Course Chemoradiotherapy

Page 25: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Polish study• 312 pts with rectal cancer palpable by

DRE

• Primary end point – sphincter preservation

• Secondary endpoints –LR, toxicity

• Operation specified by surgeon pre RT

• Randomised to 25/5 vs 45/25 + 5FU wk 1&5

• Reassessed to decide on final operation post RT

Bujko et al. Radioth Oncol 2004; 72: 15

Page 26: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Polish study

• No difference in sphincter-preservation rates

• More acute Gd 3 & 4 toxicity with CRT– 18% v 3% (p=0.001)

• More pCR, less N+ & CRM+ with CRT– 16.1% v 0.7%, 31.6% v 47.6%, 4.4%v 12.9%

Page 27: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Polish study

• No difference late toxicity– 28.3% v 27%

• No difference in 4 yr LR– 15.6% v 10.6% (p=0.21)

Page 28: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Why give CRT?

• Downstage inoperable tumours (but is there a role for SCPRT?)

• Downstage tumours where there is a threatened CRM (by primary or node)

Page 29: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Practicalities of RT

• Tattoos

• Empty rectum, full bladder

• CT scan

• SCPRT: 5 daily treatments the week before surgery

• CRT: 25-28 daily treatments with bd capecitabine chemotherapy

Page 30: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Toxicities of RT

• Acute: sore skin, tiredness, nausea, diarrhoea, PR bleeding, urinary

• Late: bowel dysfunction, urinary, small bowel stricture, infertility, menopause, poor wound healing, vaginal stricture, impotence, pelvic bone fragility, risk of second malignancy

Page 31: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Planning RT

• CT scan

• Fields vs volumes

• Aristotle trial

• Include – mesorectum– Extension of tumour beyond mesorectum

(+margin)– Sup: sacral promontory– Inf: obturator foramen, or 2-3cm below tumour

Page 32: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Adjuvant Radiotherapy

• Post-op if positive margin (R1 resection)

• Only if no pre-op RT given

• Not as effective as pre-op RT

• Better than nothing

Page 33: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Neoadjuvant chemotherapy for colon cancer

Page 34: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

FOXTROT trial

• Ongoing

• Initial data: 150 patients

• Locally advanced (T3/4) colon tumours on CT

• 3 cycles (6 weeks) FOLFOX chemo and Surgery vs Surgery alone

Page 35: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

FOXTROT

• No diff post-op morbidity (p=0.8)

• Decreased T and N stage with neoadjuvant chemo (p=0.04)

• Decreased margin involvement (p=0.002)

Lancet Oncol 2012; 13:1152-60

Page 36: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Adjuvant Chemotherapy

Page 37: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Rectal Cancer

• All data extrapolated from colon cancer

• SCPRT – does not downstage cancer

• CRT – downstages cancer

• Treat on initial clinical staging

• Chronicle trial failed to recruit

• Good prognostic group: ypT0 ypN0 M0– Distant metastases 8.9%, 5yr DFS 85%

Page 38: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Colon cancer

• Initial studies done with 5FU

• Intergroup 035 (5FU vs no chemo)– 5yr OS benefit for Dukes C 13%– 5yr OS benefit for Dukes B 3-5%

• X-ACT (capecitabine vs 5FU)– 4% benefit for cap

• MOSAIC (5FU /oxaliplatin vs 5FU)– 3yr DFS benefit of 5%

Page 39: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Current Practice

• Node positive tumours– 5FU / Oxaliplatin– If less fit / elderly, Cap alone

• High risk node negative tumours– EMVI, T4, R1, Emergency presentation, <12

nodes– Cap / 5FU alone– 5FU / Oxalipatin if lots of risk factors

Page 40: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

What does this mean for patients?

• 6 months treatment (SCOT trial ongoing)

• Tiredness, nausea, diarrhoea, stomatitis

• Palmar plantar syndrome

• Neuropathy, orolaryngeal spasm

• Haematological toxicity

• Cardiac toxicity

• Thromboembolic disease

• DPD deficiency

Page 41: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Follow Up

• Often CNS led

• Risk stratified

• Regular CT scans– Timing controversial– To assess for resectable liver mets

Page 42: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Treatment of liver metastases

Page 43: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Liver only disease

• Assessment– CT, MRI Liver, PET

• Resectable– Refer for surgery, ?chemo upfront– EPOC B

• Unresectable– K-Ras status– Chemotherapy for 3 months and reassess– SIRT (FOXFIRE trial)

Page 44: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Chemotherapy

• FOLFOX

• Every 2 weeks for 6 cycles, PICC line

• If k-ras wild-type and unresectable for Cetuximab

• mAb EGFR

• Celim study: ph 2 (Lancet Oncol 2010)– RR: 68% with FOLFOX and Cetuximab– Resectability increased from 32% to 60%

Page 45: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Why liver resection?

• Historically 50% colorectal cancer patients develop liver mets

• 30% present with liver mets

• Resection can give 5yr OS rates of 21-43%

Page 46: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

After liver resection

• 3 months adjuvant chemotherapy

• 6 monthly CT scans

• Further liver resections may be possible

Page 47: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Presentation with liver mets

• 2 problems: liver and primary

• Which will kill patient first?

• Risk of obstruction – surgery vs stent?

• Will delaying chemo harm patient?

• Risk of micrometastatic disease elsewhere

• Synchronous resections?

• Controversial area

Page 48: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Lung metastases

• Extrapolate from liver data

• Resection of <5 lung mets

• No adjuvant chemo

• PULMIC study

Page 49: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Palliative Treatments

Page 50: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Primary in situ

• Does resecting the primary give an advantage?

• Assess for obstruction

• Stents

• May prevent use of bevacizumab (anti-angiogenesis Ab)

Page 51: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Chemotherapy

• In fit patients (PS 0-1), multiple lines of chemotherapy can give 18-24 months survival

• Chemo drugs: 5FU / Capecitabine, Oxaliplatin, Irinotecan

• Biological therapies: Cetuximab, Bevacizumab, Panitumumab

• New agents: Aflibercept, Regorafenib

Page 52: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Liver therapies

• RFA

• Chemoembolisation

• SIRT

Page 53: Colorectal Cancer An oncologists perspective

Radiotherapy

• Rectal cancer– 25Gy/5# can downstage– 8Gy/1# can stop bleeding– Hard to give if has had RT pre-op

• Bone mets

• Back pain from para-aortic disease

• Lung met with haemoptysis