Abstract
Purpose: This is a first-in-man safety study in locally advanced pancreatic cancer (LAPC) using a targeted intra-arterial delivery catheter (RenovoCath™).Methods: Twenty patients were enrolled in a four-stage dose escalation of intra-arterial, locally delivered gemcitabine, at doses up to 1000 mg/m2. Patients' symptoms and laboratory values were monitored for safety and tolerability. Secondary endpoints included the effect on tumor size, tumor markers, and survival.Results: One hundred one treatments were administered to 20 patients. Five patients dropped out early due to adverse events or withdrawing consent. Serious adverse events and complications were as follows: sepsis (n = 3), grade 3 neutropenia (n = 3), guide-mediated vascular dissection (n = 3), and pulmonary toxicity (n = 1). There were no cases of elevated liver or pancreatic enzymes. All sepsis cases occurred in patients with biliary stent/drains, prompting the addition of periprocedural treatment with antibiotics, which effectively prevented further sepsis in the study. Efficacy analysis was limited to 15 patients who received more than two treatments. Fifty-eight percent of these patients had a reduction in CA 19-9 tumor markers, 3 patients had tumor progression, 1 had partial response, and 11 showed disease stability. The survival rate at 12 months was 60%.Conclusions: The results demonstrate feasibility of localized and selective intra-arterial chemotherapy delivery to the pancreas utilizing the RenovoCath. With gemcitabine, this approach is safe, with the sole prerequisite of perioperative antibiotics for patients with prior biliary drainage/stent. Efficacy results suggest a survival benefit when compared to historical control, especially in patients with prior radiation therapy.
Highlights
Improving the survival curve of pancreatic cancer has been a clinical challenge, with an average median survival time stalled at 9–12 months from time of diagnosis.[1]
We show the results of the first-in-man study, which evaluated the safety of using the RC-120 catheter in patients with locally advanced pancreatic cancer (LAPC)
Twenty patients with LAPC received dose-escalated gemcitabine delivered intra-arterially through the RC120 device at two centers over a 14-month period starting in May 2015
Summary
Improving the survival curve of pancreatic cancer has been a clinical challenge, with an average median survival time stalled at 9–12 months from time of diagnosis.[1] Most patients are diagnosed in the later stages (3 and 4) when they are ineligible for surgical resection, currently the only potential for a cure. The last 3 years have seen new approaches, including the use of combination chemotherapy (fluorouracil [5-FU], leucovorin, irinotecan, and oxaliplatin or gemcitabine plus Abraxane) for the treatment of stage 4 (metastatic) disease, and modest gains in survival with an increase in median survival of 8–16 weeks.[2,3]. Various other treatment strategies have been used, including the previously mentioned combination chemotherapy approved for patients with stage 4 disease, a chemoradiation regimen and, more recently, registry data that
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