Radiological and Surgical Implications of Neoadjuvant Treatment With FOLFIRINOX for Locally Advanced and Borderline Resectable Pancreatic Cancer
Massachusetts General Hospital · Harvard University
Abstract
Of 188 patients undergoing resection for PDAC, 40 LA/borderline received FOLFIRINOX and 87 received no neoadjuvant therapy. FOLFIRINOX resulted in a significant decrease in tumor size, yet 19 patients were still classified as LA and 9 as borderline. Despite post-FOLFIRINOX imaging suggesting continued unresectability, 92% had an R0 resection. When compared with no neoadjuvant therapy, FOLFIRINOX resulted in significantly longer operative times (393 vs 300 minutes) and blood loss (600 vs 400 mL), but significantly lower operative morbidity (36% vs 63%) and no postoperative pancreatic fistulas. Length of stay (6 vs 7 days), readmissions (20% vs 30%), and mortality were equivalent (1% vs 0%). On final pathology, the FOLFIRINOX group had a significant decrease in lymph node positivity (35% vs 79%) and perineural invasion (72% vs 95%). Median follow-up was 11 months with a significant increase in overall survival with FOLFIRINOX.
After neoadjuvant FOLFIRINOX imaging no longer predicts unresectability. Traditional pathologic predictors of survival are improved, and morbidity is decreased in comparison to patients with clearly resectable cancers at the time of presentation. The study evaluates the accuracy of imaging in determining the resectability of pancreatic adenocarcinoma and determines the surgical outcomes of pancreatic resections after neoadjuvant FOLFIRINOX therapy. Imaging does not predict unresectability, and traditional pathologic predictors of survival are improved in comparison to patients with clearly resectable cancers at the time of presentation.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 29.09
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 26
Authors
21Topics & keywords
- FOLFIRINOX
- Medicine
- Neoadjuvant therapy
- Pancreatic cancer
- Oncology
- Lymph node
- Internal medicine
- Adenocarcinoma
- Good health and well-being