Article Search

Postoperative Hepatic Arterial Infusion With Oxaliplatin After Surgery of Four or More Colorectal Liver Metastases: A Randomized Phase II Trial

For high-risk patients with four or more colorectal liver metastases, adjuvant hepatic arterial infusion oxaliplatin roughly doubled hepatic recurrence-free survival versus standard IV chemotherapy (25 vs. 12 months), with recurrence-free survival (RFS) benefit as well. Overall survival (OS) didn't reach significance but the absolute difference and 5-year OS of 62% versus 47% suggest a real effect worth confirming in phase III. Toxicity was higher in the hepatic arterial infusion (HAI) arm but manageable with no treatment-related deaths. Generalizability remains the challenge, these needs specialized centers with HAI expertise, but worth keeping in mind for your highest-risk resected liver met patients.

Read More »

Randomized Phase II/III Trial Comparing Hepatectomy, Followed by mFOLFOX6 With Hepatectomy Alone for Liver Metastasis From Colorectal Cancer: Long-Term Results of JCOG0603

The mature overall survival (OS) data from this Japanese randomized trial answer the question the initial publication left open, and the answer is no, adjuvant mFOLFOX6 after hepatectomy for resectable colorectal liver metastases does not improve overall survival (HR 1.07, P=.74), despite the previously reported DFS benefit. Five-year OS was numerically worse in the chemotherapy arm (73% vs 80%), though not significantly so. The disease-free survival (DFS) benefit was likely confounded by oxaliplatin-induced hepatic changes obscuring imaging and imbalances in post-recurrence therapy. Selection of patients and those with curable vs incurable intent surgery may have led to some bias in my opinion.

Read More »

Keyword Search

  • Cancer Types

  • Month Contributed

  • Show FCS Articles Only

  • Sort Order

  • Number of Posts