A Pilot Study of Perioperative Cisplatin-Capecitabine Chemotherapy With Preoperative Chemoradiation for Resectable Gastric Cancers.

2021 
OBJECTIVES The standard of care for resectable gastric cancers (GCs) includes perioperative chemotherapy (CT) or postoperative chemo/chemoradiotherapy (CRT) strategies. Poor treatment compliance postsurgery suggests that intensified surgical adjuvant treatment is more likely deliverable preceding surgery and, therefore, the safety and efficacy of perioperative cisplatin-capecitabine (CX) with preoperative chemoradiation (preopCRT) were ascertained. MATERIALS AND METHODS Between January 2017 and December 2018, 28 potentially resectable locally advanced GC patients were offered neoadjuvant CT-2 cycles of CX at 3-weekly intervals, followed by preopCRT 45 Gy/25 fractions/5 weeks and concurrent capecitabine, followed by surgical resection and 3 adjuvant cycles of CX. RESULTS Neoadjuvant CT was commenced in 28 patients (100%), preopCRT in 18 patients (64%), and surgery performed in 13 patients (46%). At each treatment step, decreasing patient numbers were due mainly to disease progression (12 [43%]) or other reasons, including (3 [11%]) from treatment-related toxicity. The R0 resection rate was 92% (12/13); a median of 18 nodes was obtained after D2 nodal clearance in 92% (12/13). There were 20%/4%/4% grade 3/4/5 toxicities. The median radiotherapy dose/duration was 45 Gy/5.4 weeks. Adjuvant CT was started in 11 patients (39%) and the third cycle was received by 7 patients (25%). No tumor (ypT0N0) was noted in 23% of the operated patients (3/13), or 11% of the intention-to-treat population (3/28). The median, 1-year, and 2-year survivals were 12 months, 53%, and 32%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS Intensified preoperative treatment is doable in relatively unselected advanced GC patients in real-world settings of a public-sector hospital from a low-middle-income country. Disease progression during preoperative therapy allows patients destined for early clinical evidence of disease dissemination to avoid futile surgery, as opposed to a surgery-first strategy, without an overt increase in surgical morbidity or mortality, with encouraging R0 resection rates.
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