Retrospective Clinical Study of Advanced Pancreatic Cancer Treated With Chemotherapy and Abdominal Hyperthermia

Purpose: Hyperthermia is a mechanistically plausible partner with chemotherapy, although many of the underlying molecular mechanisms of this combination treatment are not yet properly understood. Preclinical studies suggest that there is potential synergy with gemcitabine and that provides the basis...

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Main Authors: Yu-Fei Fan, Yuan Qin, Ding-Gang Li, David Kerr
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Society of Clinical Oncology 2017-07-01
Series:Journal of Global Oncology
Online Access:http://ascopubs.org/doi/10.1200/JGO.2017.009985
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spelling doaj-9c289041bf164c1cb237dffb6dbe45502020-11-25T03:32:36ZengAmerican Society of Clinical OncologyJournal of Global Oncology2378-95062017-07-0141410.1200/JGO.2017.00998510Retrospective Clinical Study of Advanced Pancreatic Cancer Treated With Chemotherapy and Abdominal HyperthermiaYu-Fei FanYuan QinDing-Gang LiDavid KerrPurpose: Hyperthermia is a mechanistically plausible partner with chemotherapy, although many of the underlying molecular mechanisms of this combination treatment are not yet properly understood. Preclinical studies suggest that there is potential synergy with gemcitabine and that provides the basis for retrospective analysis of a clinical series combining these treatment modalities for patients with advanced pancreatic cancer. Patients and Methods: Twenty-nine chemotherapy-naive patients with locally advanced or metastatic pancreatic carcinoma with malignant ascites were treated with intraperitoneal cisplatin 30 mg/m2 and gemcitabine 800 to 1,000 mg/m2 intravenously on days 1, 8, and 15 every 28 days until tumor progression. Patients also received regional hyperthermia treatment (41 to 42°C) on the upper abdomen two times per week from days 1 to 21. Results: In all, 83 cycles of chemotherapy were administered and were generally well tolerated. No patients had a complete response, 13 had a partial response, seven had stable disease, and 9 had progressive disease. Mean progression-free survival and overall survival were 119 ± 61days and 195 ± 98 days, respectively. Conclusion: This study provides preliminary evidence that the treatment approach of combined systemic and intraperitoneal chemotherapy plus hyperthermia is well tolerated, is active, and has an acceptable survival profile for patients with stage IV pancreatic cancer and ascites.http://ascopubs.org/doi/10.1200/JGO.2017.009985
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yu-Fei Fan
Yuan Qin
Ding-Gang Li
David Kerr
spellingShingle Yu-Fei Fan
Yuan Qin
Ding-Gang Li
David Kerr
Retrospective Clinical Study of Advanced Pancreatic Cancer Treated With Chemotherapy and Abdominal Hyperthermia
Journal of Global Oncology
author_facet Yu-Fei Fan
Yuan Qin
Ding-Gang Li
David Kerr
author_sort Yu-Fei Fan
title Retrospective Clinical Study of Advanced Pancreatic Cancer Treated With Chemotherapy and Abdominal Hyperthermia
title_short Retrospective Clinical Study of Advanced Pancreatic Cancer Treated With Chemotherapy and Abdominal Hyperthermia
title_full Retrospective Clinical Study of Advanced Pancreatic Cancer Treated With Chemotherapy and Abdominal Hyperthermia
title_fullStr Retrospective Clinical Study of Advanced Pancreatic Cancer Treated With Chemotherapy and Abdominal Hyperthermia
title_full_unstemmed Retrospective Clinical Study of Advanced Pancreatic Cancer Treated With Chemotherapy and Abdominal Hyperthermia
title_sort retrospective clinical study of advanced pancreatic cancer treated with chemotherapy and abdominal hyperthermia
publisher American Society of Clinical Oncology
series Journal of Global Oncology
issn 2378-9506
publishDate 2017-07-01
description Purpose: Hyperthermia is a mechanistically plausible partner with chemotherapy, although many of the underlying molecular mechanisms of this combination treatment are not yet properly understood. Preclinical studies suggest that there is potential synergy with gemcitabine and that provides the basis for retrospective analysis of a clinical series combining these treatment modalities for patients with advanced pancreatic cancer. Patients and Methods: Twenty-nine chemotherapy-naive patients with locally advanced or metastatic pancreatic carcinoma with malignant ascites were treated with intraperitoneal cisplatin 30 mg/m2 and gemcitabine 800 to 1,000 mg/m2 intravenously on days 1, 8, and 15 every 28 days until tumor progression. Patients also received regional hyperthermia treatment (41 to 42°C) on the upper abdomen two times per week from days 1 to 21. Results: In all, 83 cycles of chemotherapy were administered and were generally well tolerated. No patients had a complete response, 13 had a partial response, seven had stable disease, and 9 had progressive disease. Mean progression-free survival and overall survival were 119 ± 61days and 195 ± 98 days, respectively. Conclusion: This study provides preliminary evidence that the treatment approach of combined systemic and intraperitoneal chemotherapy plus hyperthermia is well tolerated, is active, and has an acceptable survival profile for patients with stage IV pancreatic cancer and ascites.
url http://ascopubs.org/doi/10.1200/JGO.2017.009985
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