Eisenhauer E A, Therasse P, Bogaerts J, Schwartz L H, Sargent D, Ford R, Dancey J, Arbuck S, Gwyther S, Mooney M, Rubinstein L, Shankar L, Dodd L, Kaplan R, Lacombe D, Verweij J
National Cancer Institute of Canada-Clinical Trials Group, 10 Stuart Street, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada.
Eur J Cancer. 2009 Jan;45(2):228-47. doi: 10.1016/j.ejca.2008.10.026.
Assessment of the change in tumour burden is an important feature of the clinical evaluation of cancer therapeutics: both tumour shrinkage (objective response) and disease progression are useful endpoints in clinical trials. Since RECIST was published in 2000, many investigators, cooperative groups, industry and government authorities have adopted these criteria in the assessment of treatment outcomes. However, a number of questions and issues have arisen which have led to the development of a revised RECIST guideline (version 1.1). Evidence for changes, summarised in separate papers in this special issue, has come from assessment of a large data warehouse (>6500 patients), simulation studies and literature reviews. HIGHLIGHTS OF REVISED RECIST 1.1: Major changes include: Number of lesions to be assessed: based on evidence from numerous trial databases merged into a data warehouse for analysis purposes, the number of lesions required to assess tumour burden for response determination has been reduced from a maximum of 10 to a maximum of five total (and from five to two per organ, maximum). Assessment of pathological lymph nodes is now incorporated: nodes with a short axis of 15 mm are considered measurable and assessable as target lesions. The short axis measurement should be included in the sum of lesions in calculation of tumour response. Nodes that shrink to <10mm short axis are considered normal. Confirmation of response is required for trials with response primary endpoint but is no longer required in randomised studies since the control arm serves as appropriate means of interpretation of data. Disease progression is clarified in several aspects: in addition to the previous definition of progression in target disease of 20% increase in sum, a 5mm absolute increase is now required as well to guard against over calling PD when the total sum is very small. Furthermore, there is guidance offered on what constitutes 'unequivocal progression' of non-measurable/non-target disease, a source of confusion in the original RECIST guideline. Finally, a section on detection of new lesions, including the interpretation of FDG-PET scan assessment is included. Imaging guidance: the revised RECIST includes a new imaging appendix with updated recommendations on the optimal anatomical assessment of lesions.
A key question considered by the RECIST Working Group in developing RECIST 1.1 was whether it was appropriate to move from anatomic unidimensional assessment of tumour burden to either volumetric anatomical assessment or to functional assessment with PET or MRI. It was concluded that, at present, there is not sufficient standardisation or evidence to abandon anatomical assessment of tumour burden. The only exception to this is in the use of FDG-PET imaging as an adjunct to determination of progression. As is detailed in the final paper in this special issue, the use of these promising newer approaches requires appropriate clinical validation studies.
评估肿瘤负荷的变化是癌症治疗临床评估的一个重要特征:肿瘤缩小(客观缓解)和疾病进展都是临床试验中有用的终点指标。自2000年《实体瘤疗效评价标准》(RECIST)发布以来,许多研究者、协作组、企业和政府机构在评估治疗结果时都采用了这些标准。然而,出现了一些问题,促使修订版RECIST指南(1.1版)的制定。本特刊中单独论文总结的变化证据来自对一个大型数据库(>6500例患者)的评估、模拟研究和文献综述。
修订版RECIST 1.1的要点:主要变化包括:
基于为分析目的合并到一个数据库中的众多试验数据库的证据,确定肿瘤负荷以评估缓解所需的病灶数量已从最多10个减少到最多5个(每个器官从最多5个减少到最多2个)。
短径≥15 mm的淋巴结被视为可测量且可评估为靶病灶。在计算肿瘤缓解时,短径测量值应纳入病灶总和。短径缩小至<10 mm的淋巴结被视为正常。以缓解为主要终点的试验需要确认缓解,但在随机研究中不再需要,因为对照组可作为解释数据的适当手段。
除了之前靶病灶进展的定义(总和增加20%)外,现在还要求有5 mm的绝对增加,以防止在总和非常小时过度判定为疾病进展(PD)。此外,对于不可测量/非靶病灶的“明确进展”的构成提供了指导,这是原始RECIST指南中一个容易混淆的问题。最后,增加了关于新病灶检测的章节,包括对FDG-PET扫描评估的解读。
修订版RECIST包括一个新的影像学附录,其中有关于病灶最佳解剖学评估的更新建议。
RECIST工作组在制定RECIST 1.1时考虑的一个关键问题是,从肿瘤负荷的解剖学一维评估转向体积解剖学评估或使用PET或MRI进行功能评估是否合适。结论是,目前,放弃肿瘤负荷的解剖学评估没有足够的标准化或证据。唯一的例外是使用FDG-PET成像作为确定疾病进展的辅助手段。正如本特刊最后一篇论文中详细阐述的,使用这些有前景的新方法需要适当的临床验证研究。