Background Treatment for acute abdomen during chemotherapy is frequently difficult because of the complicated status of the patients, and there have been only a few case series summarizing the outcomes of emergent surgery during chemotherapy. The aim of this study was to clarify the clinical outcomes of emergency surgery for acute abdomen during chemotherapy and identify predictive factors associated with mortality. Methods We retrospectively analyzed the records of patients who underwent emergency surgery for acute abdomen within 30-days after anti-cancer drugs administration between 2009 and 2020. Results Thirty patients were identified. The primary malignancies were hematological (n = 7), colorectal (n = 4), lung (n = 4), stomach (n = 2), breast (n = 2), prostate (n = 2) and others (n = 5). Fifteen patients were treated with the regimen, including molecular-targeted anti-cancer drugs (Bevacizumab: 8 cases, Rituximab: 4, Ramucirumab: 2, and Gefitinib: 1). Indications for emergency surgery were perforation of the gastrointestinal tract (n = 24), appendicitis (n = 3), bowel obstruction (n = 2), and gallbladder perforation (n = 1). Severe morbidity (Clavien-Dindo IIIa or more) occurred in 8 cases (27%), and there were 6 in-hospital deaths (20%). Significant factors related to in-hospital death were age >70 years old (P = 0.029), poor performance status (ECOG score 1 or 2) (P = 0.0088), and serum albumin level <2.6 g/dl (P = 0.026). The incidence of acute abdomen (odds ratio 5.31, P = 0.00017) was significantly higher in the patients receiving anti-VEGF drugs than in those without anti-VEGF drugs. Conclusion This study identified three predictive factors associated with in-hospital death after emergency surgery during chemotherapy: an older age, poor performance status, and low serum albumin level.
CT-P6 is a biosimilar of trastuzumab and is recommended to be administered for 30-90 min in subsequent maintenance infusions to prevent infusion-related reactions (IRRs). We administered CT-P6 for 30 min as the first injection and as an alternative to reference trastuzumab in the maintenance infusion and evaluated the safety of the administration. A total of 140 patients with breast or gastric cancer, who received a switch from tri-weekly reference trastuzumab to CT-P6 for 30 min in maintenance infusions, were retrospectively evaluated. Premedication was administered prior to an infusion of CT-P6 and a cytotoxic agent. However, premedication was not provided when CT-P6 was co-administered with pertuzumab or administered alone. The primary endpoint was the incidence of IRRs. The secondary endpoint was the incidence of diarrhea and skin toxicity. Ninety-five percent of the patients had breast cancer, and 44.3% had advance-stage cancer. The treatment included CT-P6 alone (17.9%) or with cytotoxic agents (23.6%), antihormonal drugs (25.7%), and pertuzumab (62.9%). Median administration time of trastuzumab at the switch was 13 administrations (range 2-140). Premedication was administered to 20.7% patients. One patient (0.7%) experienced grade 3 IRR. The frequency of diarrhea in the reference trastuzumab group and the CT-P6 group was 7.1 and 6.4%, respectively, and that of skin toxicity was 6.4 and 5.0%, respectively, without differences. In conclusion, we first demonstrated that an initial CT-P6 administration for 30 min during the switch from reference trastuzumab in maintenance infusion is an acceptable administration method.
Background: Docetaxel + Trastuzumab (H) + Pertuzumab (P) provided progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) benefits in HER2-positive advanced or metastatic breast cancer (AMBC) in the CLEOPATRA study as a first-line therapy. However, long-term administration of docetaxel at a dose of 75 mg/m2 every 3 weeks in AMBC patients (pts) is difficult due to the toxicities. Eribulin mesylate (E) is a well-tolerated microtubule inhibitor, and we have reported the efficacy and safety of EHP regimen as first- and second-line therapy for AMBC in a multicenter, phase II study (JBCRG-M03/UMIN000012232). In this M06 study, we address the clinical question as to which is the better chemotherapy partner for HP as first line regimen, in terms of efficacy, toxicity and QOL. Methods: JBCRG-M06 is a multicenter open-label randomized phase III study for HER2-positive AMBC pts who have received no prior chemotherapy except for the HER2- Antibody-Drug Conjugate (ADC). Pts will be randomized 1:1 to E (1.4mg/m2 on day 1 and 8) + H (8 mg/kg loading dose followed by 6 mg/kg) +P (840 mg loading dose followed by 420 mg) q3wks or standard taxanes (docetaxel 75mg/m2 on day1 or paclitaxel 80mg/m2 on day 1, 8 and 15) + HP q3wks. Stratification factors for randomization are; presence of visceral metastases, number of prior taxanes on perioperative adjuvant treatment, and treatment with prior anti-HER2-ADC. Primary endpoint is PFS and secondary endpoints include overall response rate, duration of response, OS, patient-reported outcomes (PRO) relating to QOL and peripheral neuropathy, new-metastases free survival, and safety. Translational research to search for biomarker for individual precision therapy will be performed. Main eligibility criteria are as follows: pts with HER2-positive AMBC, female aged 20-70 years old, ECOG PS of 0-1, LVEF ≥ 50% at baseline and adequate organ function. Pts who had progressive MBC within 6 months after the end of primary adjuvant systemic chemotherapy are excluded. The sample size was calculated by type1 error (2-sided) of 0.05 and 80% power to estimate the noninferiority margin 1.33 with an expected median PFS of 14.2 months. The target number of pts is 480 recruited over the duration of 3-years. The first patient in was achieved on August 2017. (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:NCT03264547). Citation Format: Masuda N, Yamashita T, Saji S, Araki K, Ito Y, Takano T, Takahashi M, Tsurutani J, Koizumi K, Kitada M, Kojima Y, Sagara Y, Tada H, Iwasa T, Kadoya T, Iwatani T, Hasegawa H, Morita S, Ohno S. A phase III trial to compare eribulin mesylate + trastuzumab (H) + pertuzumab (P) with paclitaxel or docetaxel + HP for HER2-positive advanced or metastatic breast cancer (JBCRG-M06/ EMERALD) [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 2018 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium; 2018 Dec 4-8; San Antonio, TX. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2019;79(4 Suppl):Abstract nr OT2-07-05.
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