European journal of surgical oncology : the journal of the European Society of Surgical Oncology and the British Association of Surgical Oncology
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Downstaging by regional chemotherapy of non-resectable isolated colorectal liver metastases.
To improve the course of isolated non-resectable colorectal liver metastases (CRLM) by hepatic arterial infusion treatment. Patients with CRLM have a worse prognosis than those whose liver metastases are resectable. Systemic (i.v.) chemotherapy for CRLM/colorectal metastases with 5-fluorouracil+folinic acid (5-FU+FA) i.v. may result in median survival times of 6.4-14.3 months. Hepatic artery infusion (HAI) with 5-fluorodeoxyuridine (5-FUDR) has been demonstrated in a meta-analysis of randomized trials to be superior to i.v. treatment/palliative care (median survival 15 vs. 10 months). The benefit of HAI with 5-FUDR, although recommended as treatment for CRLM, is severely compromised by the 5-FUDR induced hepatotoxicity, leading eventually to sclerosing cholangitis (SC)/liver cirrhosis. We have developed a stepwise protocol for HAI in CRLM, which is superior to HAI with 5-FUDR and to systemic chemotherapy. ⋯ Optimal treatment of CRLM was found to be protocol D: HAI with MFFM. The results of this protocol, including high remission rate, long median survival time, good port function, good quality of life and, interestingly, the possibility of downstaging and resecting primarily non-resectable metastases, seem to be superior to HAI with 5-FUDR or 5-FU+FA and to systemic chemotherapy with 5-FU+FA. This hypothesis is currently being examined in a phase III study (HAI with MFFM vs. 5-FU+FA i.v.).