Abstract

BackgroundPancreatic cancer is the fourth leading cause of cancer-related death. While surgical resection remains the foundation for potentially curative treatment, survival benefit is achieved with adjuvant oncological treatment. Thus, completion of multimodality treatment (surgical resection and (neo)adjuvant chemotherapy) to all patients and early treatment of micrometastatic disease is the ideal goal. NorPACT–1 aims to test the hypothesis that overall mortality at one year after allocation of treatment can be reduced with neoadjuvant chemotherapy in surgically treated patients with resectable pancreatic cancer.Methods/DesignThe NorPACT– 1 is a multicentre, randomized controlled phase III trial organized by the Norwegian Gastrointestinal Cancer Group for Hepato-Pancreato-Biliary cancer. Patients with resectable adenocarcinoma of the pancreatic head are randomized to receive either surgery first (Group 1: SF/control) or neoadjuvant chemotherapy (Group 2: NT/intervention) with four cycles FOLFIRINOX followed by resection. Both groups receive adjuvant chemotherapy with gemicitabine and capecitabine (six cycles in Group 1, four cycles in Group 2). In total 90 patients will be randomized in all the five Norwegian university hospitals performing pancreatic surgery. Primary endpoint is overall mortality at one year following commencement of treatment for those who ultimately undergo resection. Secondary endpoints are overall survival after date of randomization (intention to treat), overall survival after resection, disease-free survival, histopathological response, complication rates after surgery, feasibility of neoadjuvant and adjuvant chemotherapy, completion rates of all parts of multimodal treatment, and quality-of-life. Bolt-on to the study is a translational research program that aims at identifying factors that are predictive of response to NT, the risk of distant cancer spread, and patient outcome.DiscussionNorPACT– 1 is designed to investigate the additional benefit of NT compared to standard treatment only (surgery + adjuvant chemotherapy) for resectable cancer of the pancreatic head to decrease early mortality (within one year) in resected patients.Trial registrationTrial open for accrual 01.02.2017.ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02919787. Date of registration: September 14, 2016.

Highlights

  • Pancreatic cancer is the fourth leading cause of cancer-related death

  • Norwegian Pancreatic Cancer Trial (NorPACT)– 1 is designed to investigate the additional benefit of neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NT) compared to standard treatment only for resectable cancer of the pancreatic head to decrease early mortality in resected patients

  • The NorPACT-1 study investigates the benefit of NT to the standard treatment for resectable cancer of the pancreatic head as a means of avoiding early mortality in resected patients

Read more

Summary

Introduction

While surgical resection remains the foundation for potentially curative treatment, survival benefit is achieved with adjuvant oncological treatment. Completion of multimodality treatment (surgical resection and (neo)adjuvant chemotherapy) to all patients and early treatment of micrometastatic disease is the ideal goal. NorPACT–1 aims to test the hypothesis that overall mortality at one year after allocation of treatment can be reduced with neoadjuvant chemotherapy in surgically treated patients with resectable pancreatic cancer. The median survival of patients undergoing pancreatic resection alone is 16–23 months, with a 5-year overall survival between 10 and 20% [3,4,5,6]. A significant proportion of patients undergoing pancreatectomy for PDAC develops recurrent disease within 2 years after surgery, and about 20% of the patients have early disease progression within six months after resection [6, 13]. Useful clinical criteria for accurate prediction of patients suspectable to suffer an early distant or loco-regional recurrence are not available

Objectives
Methods
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call