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Study
finds dramatic increase in Metastatic Colon
Cancer Survival
Newswise — Novel chemotherapy and biological
agents for metastatic colorectal cancer,
combined with surgical advances in liver
resection, have resulted in a dramatic
increase in survival for patients with
advanced disease, according to researchers
at The University of Texas M. D. Anderson
Cancer Center.
Published in the Journal of Clinical
Oncology, it is the first study in the last
20 years to examine the survival rates for
metastatic colorectal cancer, and finds that
the median overall survival is now more than
30 months, compared to eight months for
patients diagnosed before 1990.
Five-year survival of patients diagnosed
with the disease after 2004 is more than 30
percent.
Colorectal cancer is the fourth most common
cancer diagnosed in the United States.
According to the American Cancer Society, in
2008, more than 148,800 people were
diagnosed and 49,960 died from the disease.
Recently, researchers have made great
strides in identifying active agents for the
disease, resulting in FDA approval of
numerous chemotherapeutic agents, explained
Scott Kopetz, M.D., assistant professor in
M. D. Anderson’s Department of
Gastrointestinal Medical Oncology.
Over the past decade, the concept that
specific metastatic liver lesions can be
surgically removed has become more widely
accepted as practice.
Thus, more emphasis is now placed on
identifying candidates for resection of
their liver metastasis.
“In this study, we wanted to determine if
these changes resulted in longer survival of
metastatic colorectal cancer patients in a
large population base,” said Kopetz, the
study’s corresponding author.
“There had been some hints – for example, in
Phase III trials we had seen the overall
survival increase over several years.
"However,
because of the enormity of the data, the
large population data bases are slow to
reflect these changes, so there had not been
a signal of increased survival.”
A second goal of the study was to determine
which of the two modalities – surgery or
chemotherapy - was responsible for the
change in outcome, and when did the
modalities have the most impact, explained
Kopetz.
For the retrospective, population-based
study, the researchers identified 2,470
newly diagnosed metastatic colorectal cancer
patients at two institutions – M. D.
Anderson (1,614 patients) and Mayo Clinic
(856 patients) -- treated between 1990 and
2006. All patients received at least a
portion of their therapy at one of the two
institutions.
Of the 2,470 patients, 231 underwent hepatic
resection, with the surgical procedure being
preformed with increased frequency after
2000.
To determine the changes in outcome, the
researchers looked to see if patients were
able to undergo resection for their liver
metastasis and when surgery outcome took
place, as well as changes in chemotherapy
utilization at the institutions over time.
The researchers found no significant change
in overall survival in patients diagnosed
1990- 1997; the median for that date range
was 14.2 months.
However, during the time periods 1998-2000,
2001-2003 and 2004-2006, the median overall
survival rates increased from 18 months, to
18.6 months, to 29.2 months respectively.
Five-year overall survival also increased
over time: from 9.1 percent (diagnosed
1990-1997); to 13 percent (diagnosed
1998-2000); to 19.2 percent (diagnosed
2001-2003).
Five-year survival for patients diagnosed
2004-2006 has not yet been determined but is
projected to increase to more than 30
percent.
To confirm their findings, the researchers
used the National Cancer Institute’s
Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results
(SEER), the population-based cancer
registry, to identify 49,459 patients
diagnosed with metastatic colon cancer
between 1990 and 2005.
The data showed early evidence of similar
improvements in five-year and median overall
survival in more recent years, said Kopetz.
“In the study, we found not only a
significant improvement in overall survival
for metastatic colorectal cancer patients,
but we also demonstrated that the degree and
rapidity of the improvement is of a
magnitude that is rarely seen in metastatic
cancers,” said Kopetz.
“Many of these patients are not necessarily
disease-free, but living with their cancer
with a high quality of life.
"For
some patients, our goal of making metastatic
colorectal cancer a chronic condition is
closer to becoming a reality.”
In the study, the researchers compare their
findings to the incremental leaps of breast
cancer survivorship of about a decade ago,
when the development of new chemotherapy and
hormonal agents revolutionized that disease.
Looking at when these changes in colon
cancer survivorship occurred, the study
showed two distinct time periods that
reflect the impact of both hepatic
resections and the availability of new novel
therapies.
“Beginning in 1998 and even more by 2000, we
started performing higher volumes of hepatic
resections, and that coincides with the
initial increase in survival.
"The
second stage of improvement began around
2004, simultaneous to the approval of many
more chemotherapy and biological agents –
cetuximab, bevacizimab, oxaliplatin,” said
Kopetz.
“However, these two modalities are not
independent phenomenon and certainly
complement each other: as chemotherapy
improves, we can remove more tumors, and as
surgery for metastatic disease is more
commonly performed, then patients can
receive more chemotherapy.”
Kopetz said the study emphasizes the need
for more chemotherapy agents available in
the fourth-line and beyond, as many
metastatic colorectal cancer patients are
outliving treatment options available to
them.
Also, despite the study’s reported gains,
metastatic colorectal cancer remains an
incurable disease for the majority of
patients and continued research is needed to
further extended survival for patients, he
said.
The study was funded by grants from the
National Cancer Institute.
In addition to Kopetz, other M. D. Anderson
authors on the study include: George Chang,
M.D., Jean-Nicholas Vauthey, M.D., both in
the Department of Surgical Oncology; Michael
Overman, M.D. and Cathy Eng, M.D., both in
the Department of GI Medical Oncology.
Authors from the Mayo Clinic include: Daniel
Sargent, Ph.D., David Larson, M.D., Axel
Grothey, M.D., David Nagorney, M.D., Robert
McWilliams, M.D.
About M. D. Anderson
The University of Texas M. D. Anderson
Cancer Center in Houston ranks as one of the
world's most respected centers focused on
cancer patient care, research, education and
prevention. M. D. Anderson is one of only 40
comprehensive cancer centers designated by
the National Cancer Institute. For four of
the past six years, including 2008, M. D.
Anderson has ranked No. 1 in cancer care in
“America's Best Hospitals,” a survey
published annually in U.S. News & World
Report.
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