Medical College of Wisconsin
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Therapeutic Advances in Localized Pancreatic Cancer. JAMA Surg 2016 Sep 01;151(9):862-8

Date

06/09/2016

Pubmed ID

27276001

DOI

10.1001/jamasurg.2016.1113

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-84997096261 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   49 Citations

Abstract

IMPORTANCE: It is estimated that pancreatic cancer (PC) will become the second leading cause of cancer-related death in the United States by 2030.

OBSERVATIONS: Clinical and preclinical data support the understanding that PC metastases occur early in the pathogenesis of this disease, even before the primary tumor can be detected. This has important implications for the clinical management of patients with localized PC, as surgery alone is unlikely to be curative for most patients. The delivery of postoperative adjuvant therapy is problematic in this disease because of the magnitude of the operation needed to remove the primary tumor, which can affect patient recovery and delay (sometimes indefinitely) the delivery of systemic therapy. For these reasons, the use of chemotherapy and/or chemoradiation prior to surgery (neoadjuvant therapy) is increasingly recognized as the preferred strategy for treatment sequencing. Neoadjuvant therapy is recommended for patients with borderline resectable PC and, at some centers, neoadjuvant therapy has been extended to patients with resectable PC as well. Importantly, therapeutic advances in multidrug systemic therapy and radiation therapy have already been adopted in the neoadjuvant setting where treatment toxicity will not be compounded by surgical recovery. In addition, the use of local-regional therapies in highly selected patients with locally advanced PC, following a prolonged period of induction systemic therapy, will be an area of intense scrutiny. Future improvements in diagnostic biomarkers may allow for real-time sequencing of multimodality therapy for individual patients based on a more accurate and timely assessment of treatment response.

CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Neoadjuvant treatment sequencing allows patients to receive multimodality therapy in a manner that prioritizes early exposure to systemic therapy to maximize the treatment of micrometastatic disease in an immune-competent host prior to surgical intervention. Patients who complete all intended neoadjuvant therapy, including surgery, experience an overall survival benefit that is unmatched by a surgery-first approach.

Author List

Tsai S, Evans DB

Author

Douglas B. Evans MD Chair, Professor in the Surgery department at Medical College of Wisconsin




MESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold

Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols
CA-19-9 Antigen
Chemoradiotherapy, Adjuvant
Humans
Neoadjuvant Therapy
Neoplasm Micrometastasis
Pancreatectomy
Pancreatic Neoplasms
Radiosurgery