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Patterns of progression, treatment of progressive disease and post-progression survival in the New EPOC study

BACKGROUND: The addition of cetuximab (CTX) to perioperative chemotherapy (CT) for operable colorectal liver metastases resulted in a shorter progression-free survival. Details of disease progression are described to further inform the primary study outcome. METHODS: A total of 257 KRAS wild-type pa...

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Autores principales: Pugh, Siân A, Bowers, Megan, Ball, Alexandre, Falk, Stephen, Finch-Jones, Meg, Valle, Juan W, O'Reilly, Derek A, Siriwardena, Ajith K, Hornbuckle, Joanne, Rees, Myrddin, Rees, Charlotte, Iveson, Tim, Hickish, Tamas, Maishman, Tom, Stanton, Louise, Dixon, Elizabeth, Corkhill, Andrea, Radford, Mike, Garden, O James, Cunningham, David, Maughan, Tim S, Bridgewater, John A, Primrose, John N
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Nature Publishing Group 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4985352/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27434036
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/bjc.2016.208
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author Pugh, Siân A
Bowers, Megan
Ball, Alexandre
Falk, Stephen
Finch-Jones, Meg
Valle, Juan W
O'Reilly, Derek A
Siriwardena, Ajith K
Hornbuckle, Joanne
Rees, Myrddin
Rees, Charlotte
Iveson, Tim
Hickish, Tamas
Maishman, Tom
Stanton, Louise
Dixon, Elizabeth
Corkhill, Andrea
Radford, Mike
Garden, O James
Cunningham, David
Maughan, Tim S
Bridgewater, John A
Primrose, John N
author_facet Pugh, Siân A
Bowers, Megan
Ball, Alexandre
Falk, Stephen
Finch-Jones, Meg
Valle, Juan W
O'Reilly, Derek A
Siriwardena, Ajith K
Hornbuckle, Joanne
Rees, Myrddin
Rees, Charlotte
Iveson, Tim
Hickish, Tamas
Maishman, Tom
Stanton, Louise
Dixon, Elizabeth
Corkhill, Andrea
Radford, Mike
Garden, O James
Cunningham, David
Maughan, Tim S
Bridgewater, John A
Primrose, John N
author_sort Pugh, Siân A
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The addition of cetuximab (CTX) to perioperative chemotherapy (CT) for operable colorectal liver metastases resulted in a shorter progression-free survival. Details of disease progression are described to further inform the primary study outcome. METHODS: A total of 257 KRAS wild-type patients were randomised to CT alone or CT with CTX. Data regarding sites and treatment of progressive disease were obtained for the 109 (CT n=48, CT and CTX n=61) patients with progressive disease at the cut-off date for analysis of November 2012. RESULTS: The liver was the most frequent site of progression (CT 67% (32/48); CT and CTX 66% (40/61)). A higher proportion of patients in the CT and group had multiple sites of progressive disease (CT 8%, 4/48; CT and CTX 23%, 14/61 P=0.04). Further treatment for progressive disease is known for 84 patients of whom 69 received further CT, most frequently irinotecan based. Twenty-two patients, 11 in each arm, received CTX as a further line agent. CONCLUSIONS: Both the distribution of progressive disease and further treatment are as expected for such a cohort. The pattern of disease progression seen is consistent with failure of systemic micrometastatic disease control rather than failure of local disease control following liver surgery.
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spelling pubmed-49853522017-08-09 Patterns of progression, treatment of progressive disease and post-progression survival in the New EPOC study Pugh, Siân A Bowers, Megan Ball, Alexandre Falk, Stephen Finch-Jones, Meg Valle, Juan W O'Reilly, Derek A Siriwardena, Ajith K Hornbuckle, Joanne Rees, Myrddin Rees, Charlotte Iveson, Tim Hickish, Tamas Maishman, Tom Stanton, Louise Dixon, Elizabeth Corkhill, Andrea Radford, Mike Garden, O James Cunningham, David Maughan, Tim S Bridgewater, John A Primrose, John N Br J Cancer Clinical Study BACKGROUND: The addition of cetuximab (CTX) to perioperative chemotherapy (CT) for operable colorectal liver metastases resulted in a shorter progression-free survival. Details of disease progression are described to further inform the primary study outcome. METHODS: A total of 257 KRAS wild-type patients were randomised to CT alone or CT with CTX. Data regarding sites and treatment of progressive disease were obtained for the 109 (CT n=48, CT and CTX n=61) patients with progressive disease at the cut-off date for analysis of November 2012. RESULTS: The liver was the most frequent site of progression (CT 67% (32/48); CT and CTX 66% (40/61)). A higher proportion of patients in the CT and group had multiple sites of progressive disease (CT 8%, 4/48; CT and CTX 23%, 14/61 P=0.04). Further treatment for progressive disease is known for 84 patients of whom 69 received further CT, most frequently irinotecan based. Twenty-two patients, 11 in each arm, received CTX as a further line agent. CONCLUSIONS: Both the distribution of progressive disease and further treatment are as expected for such a cohort. The pattern of disease progression seen is consistent with failure of systemic micrometastatic disease control rather than failure of local disease control following liver surgery. Nature Publishing Group 2016-08-09 2016-07-19 /pmc/articles/PMC4985352/ /pubmed/27434036 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/bjc.2016.208 Text en Copyright © 2016 Cancer Research UK http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ From twelve months after its original publication, this work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-Share Alike 4.0 Unported License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
spellingShingle Clinical Study
Pugh, Siân A
Bowers, Megan
Ball, Alexandre
Falk, Stephen
Finch-Jones, Meg
Valle, Juan W
O'Reilly, Derek A
Siriwardena, Ajith K
Hornbuckle, Joanne
Rees, Myrddin
Rees, Charlotte
Iveson, Tim
Hickish, Tamas
Maishman, Tom
Stanton, Louise
Dixon, Elizabeth
Corkhill, Andrea
Radford, Mike
Garden, O James
Cunningham, David
Maughan, Tim S
Bridgewater, John A
Primrose, John N
Patterns of progression, treatment of progressive disease and post-progression survival in the New EPOC study
title Patterns of progression, treatment of progressive disease and post-progression survival in the New EPOC study
title_full Patterns of progression, treatment of progressive disease and post-progression survival in the New EPOC study
title_fullStr Patterns of progression, treatment of progressive disease and post-progression survival in the New EPOC study
title_full_unstemmed Patterns of progression, treatment of progressive disease and post-progression survival in the New EPOC study
title_short Patterns of progression, treatment of progressive disease and post-progression survival in the New EPOC study
title_sort patterns of progression, treatment of progressive disease and post-progression survival in the new epoc study
topic Clinical Study
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4985352/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27434036
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/bjc.2016.208
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