Abstract

Treatment choices for colorectal peritoneal carcinomatosis/metastases include systemic therapy and increasingly cytoreductive surgery with intraperitoneal chemotherapy delivery. These options are best considered as complementary and not exclusive alternatives. Two prospective randomized trials support use of peritonectomy procedures and intraperitoneal chemotherapy for colorectal peritoneal carcinomatosis. This overview examines efficacy, limitations and landscape of systemic therapy focusing on colorectal peritoneal carcinomatosis. Observations from literature support notions that (1) systemic therapy provides survival benefit for all prototypical patients with mCRC irrespective of metastatic disease site; (2) the magnitude of this benefit is considerably reduced among patients with peritoneal metastases who consequently experience significantly shorter overall survival; (3) efficacy of systemic therapy improved over time but at a slower pace for those with carcinomatosis; (4) this therapeutic difference has not diminished with introduction of targeted therapy, but perhaps widened; (5) further research of cytoreductive surgery and/or intraperitoneal regional therapies is thus a multidisciplinary responsibility of the entire oncology community; (6) peritonectomy procedures with intraperitoneal regional therapy are not scientifically supported in absence of systemic therapies.

Highlights

  • Contemporary landscape of treatment options in metastatic colorectal cancer includes systemic agents and regionalPeritoneal metastases in colorectal cancer develop after coelomic metastatic spread as opposed to hematogenous route in hepatic or pulmonary metastases

  • Observations from literature support notions that (1) systemic therapy provides survival benefit for all prototypical patients with metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) irrespective of metastatic disease site; (2) the magnitude of this benefit is considerably reduced among patients with peritoneal metastases who experience significantly shorter overall survival; (3) efficacy of systemic therapy improved over time but at a slower pace for those with carcinomatosis; (4) this therapeutic difference has not diminished with introduction of targeted therapy, but perhaps widened; (5) further research of cytoreductive surgery and/or intraperitoneal regional therapies is a multidisciplinary responsibility of the entire oncology community; (6) peritonectomy procedures with intraperitoneal regional therapy are not scientifically supported in absence of systemic therapies

  • The Eindhoven cancer registry study suggested that while survival for patients with colorectal liver metastases was longer in 2005–2008 period as compared to earlier periods, there was no significant improvement in overall survival among registered patients with isolated peritoneal disease, even when analysis was limited to chemotherapy recipients [29]

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Summary

Introduction

Contemporary landscape of treatment options in metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) includes systemic agents (cytotoxic, targeted and immunotherapy) and regional. Despite differences in histological type and disease volume burden [26,27,28] Another important, yet often overlooked feature of colorectal peritoneal metastases/carcinomatosis, is its consistently worse survival as compared to unselected mCRC patients or those with absence of peritoneal involvement. Assersohn et al [7] pooled data obtained from trials of 5-FU based therapy conducted before approval of modern cytostatics This analysis of Royal Marsden Hospital prospective data demonstrated substantially lower objective response of metastases in peritoneum as compared to other metastatic sites. The Eindhoven cancer registry study suggested that while survival for patients with colorectal liver metastases was longer in 2005–2008 period as compared to earlier periods, there was no significant improvement in overall survival among registered patients with isolated peritoneal disease, even when analysis was limited to chemotherapy recipients [29]. Remarkably similar survival of cetuximab-treated patients without peritoneal metastases (20.7 months) was observed in CAIRO2 study [11]

Discussion
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