Siriwardena Ajith K, Chan Anthony K C, Ignatowicz Agnieszka M, Mason James M
Regional Hepato-Pancreato-Biliary Unit, Manchester Royal Infirmary, Manchester, UK.
Faculty of Medicine, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK.
BMJ Open. 2017 Jun 9;7(6):e015018. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-015018.
Colorectal cancer is the fourth most common cancer in the UK and an important cause of cancer-related death. In 20% of patients, there is metastasis to the liver or beyond at the time of diagnosis. The management of synchronous disease is complex. Conventional surgery removes the colorectal primary first, followed by chemotherapy, with resection of liver metastases as a final step. Advances in the availability and safety of liver surgery, anaesthesia and critical care have made two alternative options feasible. The first is synchronous resection of the primary and liver metastases. The second is resection of the metastatic disease as the first step, termed the reverse or liver-first approach. Currently, evidence is inadequate to inform the selection of care pathway for patients with colorectal cancer and synchronous liver-limited metastases. Specifically, optimal pathways are not defined and there is a dearth of prospectively recorded cohort-defining factors influencing treatment selection or outcome.
Colorectal cancer with Synchronous liver-limited Metastases: an Inception Cohort (CoSMIC) is an inception cohort study of patients with a new diagnosis of colorectal cancer with synchronous liver-limited metastases. The sequence of treatment received, and factors influencing treatment decisions, will be evaluated against European Society of Medical Oncology guidelines. Clinical data will be collected, and quality of life, morbidity, mortality and long-term outcome compared for different treatment sequences adjusted for prognostic factors. Disease-free survival or progression will be measured at 1, 2 and 5 years. A nested qualitative study will ascertain patient experiences and clinician perspectives on delivery of care.
The full study protocol was independently peer reviewed by Professor Kees de Jong (University of Maastricht, Holland). CoSMIC has ethical approval from the National Health Service Research Ethics Committee (14/NW/1397). Results will be disseminated to healthcare professionals and patient groups, and may be used to design a definitive trial addressing areas of equipoise in treatment pathways, as well as optimising current pathways to improve outcomes and experiences.
NCT02456285, pre-results.
结直肠癌是英国第四大常见癌症,也是癌症相关死亡的重要原因。20%的患者在诊断时已发生肝转移或远处转移。同时性疾病的治疗很复杂。传统手术先切除结直肠原发灶,然后进行化疗,最后切除肝转移灶。肝脏手术、麻醉和重症监护在可用性和安全性方面的进展使另外两种选择成为可能。第一种是同时切除原发灶和肝转移灶。第二种是第一步切除转移病灶,即逆向或肝优先方法。目前,尚无足够证据为结直肠癌合并同时性肝局限性转移患者选择治疗方案提供依据。具体而言,最佳治疗途径尚未明确,而且缺乏前瞻性记录的影响治疗选择或结果的队列定义因素。
结直肠癌合并同时性肝局限性转移:一项初始队列研究(CoSMIC)是一项针对新诊断为结直肠癌合并同时性肝局限性转移患者的初始队列研究。将对照欧洲医学肿瘤学会指南评估所接受的治疗顺序以及影响治疗决策的因素。收集临床数据,并针对根据预后因素调整后的不同治疗顺序,比较生活质量、发病率、死亡率和长期结局。将在1年、2年和5年时测量无病生存或疾病进展情况。一项嵌套的定性研究将确定患者的体验以及临床医生对治疗实施的看法。
完整的研究方案由基斯·德容教授(荷兰马斯特里赫特大学)独立进行同行评审。CoSMIC已获得英国国家医疗服务体系研究伦理委员会的伦理批准(14/NW/1397)。研究结果将传播给医疗专业人员和患者群体,并可用于设计一项确定性试验,以解决治疗途径中存在平衡的领域,以及优化当前途径以改善结局和体验。
NCT02456285,预结果。