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Surgical Management of Advanced GIST Following KIT-Directed Therapy Chandrajit P. Raut, Jayesh Desai, Jeffrey A. Morgan, Suzanne George, Matthew Posner, David Zahrieh, Christopher D. M. Fletcher, George D. Demetri, and Monica M. Bertagnolli Brigham and Women’s Hospital Dana-Farber Cancer Institute Harvard Medical School November 20, 2005

Surgical Management of Advanced GIST Following KIT-Directed Therapy

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Surgical Management of Advanced GIST Following KIT-Directed Therapy. Chandrajit P. Raut, Jayesh Desai, Jeffrey A. Morgan, Suzanne George, Matthew Posner, David Zahrieh, Christopher D. M. Fletcher, George D. Demetri, and Monica M. Bertagnolli Brigham and Women’s Hospital - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Surgical Management of Advanced GIST Following KIT-Directed Therapy

Surgical Management of Advanced GIST Following KIT-

Directed Therapy

Chandrajit P. Raut, Jayesh Desai, Jeffrey A. Morgan, Suzanne George,Matthew Posner, David Zahrieh, Christopher D. M. Fletcher,

George D. Demetri, and Monica M. Bertagnolli

Brigham and Women’s HospitalDana-Farber Cancer Institute

Harvard Medical School

November 20, 2005

Page 2: Surgical Management of Advanced GIST Following KIT-Directed Therapy

Gastrointestinal Stromal Tumor (GIST): Therapy in Advanced Disease

• Imatinib therapy results in disease regression or stabilization in approximately 80% of patients with advanced GIST

• Sunitinib may achieve significant anti-tumor responses in imatinib-resistant tumors

• However, response to KIT-directed therapy is not maintained indefinitely, resulting in disease progression

Page 3: Surgical Management of Advanced GIST Following KIT-Directed Therapy

GIST: Therapy in Advanced Disease

• Once drug resistance occurs, disease progression may be:1. Limited

• Drug responsiveness or growth stability in most metastatic tumor deposits

• Progressive growth in isolated lesions

2. Generalized• Progressive growth in most tumor deposits

• Traditional role of surgery in advanced disease: palliation

Page 4: Surgical Management of Advanced GIST Following KIT-Directed Therapy

Survival in Advanced GISTVerweij et al. (2004), Lancet 364:1127

• 964 pts with advanced GIST• Randomized to imatinib 400 qd vs. bid• Median f/u 760 days

Progression-Free Survival

25-mo PFS: 50-56%

Overall Survival

12-mo OS: 85-86%24-mo OS: 69-74%

Page 5: Surgical Management of Advanced GIST Following KIT-Directed Therapy

Should Advanced GIST Be Managed More Aggressively?

• Treatment with imatinib has altered the natural course of the disease

• However, drug resistance may limit long-term efficacy

• Re-evaluation of the role of surgery in advanced GIST

Page 6: Surgical Management of Advanced GIST Following KIT-Directed Therapy

Study Objective

• Determine if resection or debulking of stable or progressive advanced GIST after treatment with KIT-directed therapy impacted survival?

Page 7: Surgical Management of Advanced GIST Following KIT-Directed Therapy

Patient Cohort

• March, 2002 – November, 2004• 69 consecutive patients with advanced,

biopsy-proven GIST• Diagnosis confirmed by review of tumor

pathology• Multidisciplinary team approach:

• Treatment with KIT-directed therapy• Surgery

Page 8: Surgical Management of Advanced GIST Following KIT-Directed Therapy

Patient CharacteristicsNo. Patients (%)

N=69

Age

Median 57.1 yrs

Range 21.3-76.5 yrs

Gender

Male 46 (67)

Female 23 (33)

Extent of disease at presentation

Unresectable primary without metastases 9 (13)

Metastatic disease 60 (87)

Tumor KIT immunoreactivity

Positive 68 (99)

Negative 1 (1)

Page 9: Surgical Management of Advanced GIST Following KIT-Directed Therapy

Preoperative Therapy

Treatment RegimenNo. Patients (%)

N=69

Imatinib only 45 (65)

Imatinib, then sunitinib 21 (30.5)

Imatinib, then doxorubicin 1 (1.5)

Observation 2 (3)

Page 10: Surgical Management of Advanced GIST Following KIT-Directed Therapy

Patient Cohort: Extent of Disease

• Stable disease• Initially unresectable primary or metastatic disease who

demonstrated maximal response to drug• No tumor progression prior to surgery for a median of 211

days (range 62-1196 days)• All sites were resectable

• Limited disease progression• Metastatic disease with limited progression on drug• All progressing sites were resectable

• Generalized disease progression• Metastatic disease with generalized progression on drug• All progressing sites were not resectable• 43% were emergent procedures• Remaining patients had excellent performance status

Page 11: Surgical Management of Advanced GIST Following KIT-Directed Therapy

Indications for Surgery

No. Patients (%)N=69

Indications for surgery

Stable disease 23 (33)

Limited progression 32 (47)

Generalized progression 14 (20)

Emergency Surgery Indications 10 (14)

Intestinal perforation 4

Gastrointestinal bleeding 4

Intratumoral abscess 1

Intratumoral abscess with fistula 1

Page 12: Surgical Management of Advanced GIST Following KIT-Directed Therapy

Extent of Surgical ResectionSurgical Procedure No. Patients

Gastrectomy splenectomy 6

Gastrectomy + other bowel resection 4

Hepatic resection 7

Hepatic resection + other bowel resection 10

LAR / APR / transanal resection rectal tumor 7

Resection of single bowel segment 7

Resection of multiple bowel segments 14

Pancreatic and/or duodenal resection 5

Partial cystectomy + other bowel resection 2

Resection pelvic tumor 1

Resection retroperitoneal tumor 1

Hysterectomy and bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy 1

Resection abdominal wall tumor 4

Additional localized peritoneal stripping / omentectomy – 43/69 (62%)

Page 13: Surgical Management of Advanced GIST Following KIT-Directed Therapy

Postoperative Therapy

Treatment RegimenNo. Patients

N=69

Imatinib alone 33

Sunitinib alone 19

Imatinib, then sunitinib 10

Imatinib, then phase I agent 3

Imatinib, then sunitinib, then phase I agent 2

Sunitinib, then imatinib plus rapamycin 1

No additional therapy 1

Page 14: Surgical Management of Advanced GIST Following KIT-Directed Therapy

Surgical Outcome

• Results of operation were recorded as:• No evidence of disease (NED)

No grossly visible residual disease

• Minimal residual diseaseVisible tumor nodule(s) < 1 cm

• Bulky residual diseaseVisible tumor nodule(s) ≥ 1 cm

Page 15: Surgical Management of Advanced GIST Following KIT-Directed Therapy

Surgical Outcome According to Disease Presentation

NEDMinimal Residual Disease

Bulky Residual Disease

TOTAL

Stable disease (%) 18 (78) 4 (17) 1 (4) 23

Limited progression (%) 8 (25) 19 (59) 5 (16) 32

Generalized progression (%) 1 (7) 7 (50) 6 (43) 14

TOTAL 27 30 12 69

• Disease presentation prior to surgery strongly correlated with surgical result (p<0.0001)

Page 16: Surgical Management of Advanced GIST Following KIT-Directed Therapy

Progression-Free Survival

12-mo PFS ± SE (%)

Median TTP (mo)

Stable disease80% ± 9% NR

Limited progression 33% ± 9% 7.7

Generalized progression 0% 2.9

Median follow-up 14.6 mo

Page 17: Surgical Management of Advanced GIST Following KIT-Directed Therapy

Overall Survival

12-mo OS ± SE (%)

Median Survival

(mo)

Stable disease95% ± 5% NR

Limited progression

86% ± 6% 29.8

Generalized progression

0% 5.6

Median follow-up 14.6 mo

Page 18: Surgical Management of Advanced GIST Following KIT-Directed Therapy

Stable Disease

• 21/23 (91%) pts with stable disease prior to surgery were treated with imatinib preoperatively

• Outcomes:• 5/21 (24%) recurred

PFS recalculated from the time imatinib commenced (median follow-up 25 mo)

12-mo PFS 100%

24-mo PFS 88% ± 8%

36-mo PFS 59% ± 15%

• 2/21 (9.5%) died

Page 19: Surgical Management of Advanced GIST Following KIT-Directed Therapy

Conclusions

• Patients with stable disease on KIT-directed therapy have prolonged PFS/OS after resection

• Patients with limited disease progression may benefit from debulking procedures

• Benefits of surgery in patients with generalized disease progression are limited

Page 20: Surgical Management of Advanced GIST Following KIT-Directed Therapy

Future Directions

• Prospective clinical trial in patients with stable advanced GIST randomized to KIT-directed therapy alone vs. surgery plus KIT-directed therapy

Patients with stable metastatic

gastrointestinal stromal tumor

Consent

Registration and randomization

Arm 1: KIT-directed therapy

plus surgery

Arm 2: KIT-directed therapy

Follow

Page 21: Surgical Management of Advanced GIST Following KIT-Directed Therapy

Dana-Farber / Brigham and Women’s Cancer Center:Sarcoma Center

• Medical OncologyKaren Albritton, MDGeorge Demetri, MDSuzanne George, MDJeffrey Morgan, MDRhaea Photopoulos, NPKathleen Polson, NP

• Surgical Oncology Monica Bertagnolli, MDChandrajit Raut, MD

• Radiation OncologyElizabeth Baldini, MDPhilip Devlin, MDKaren Marcus, MD

• Orthopedic OncologyJohn Ready, MD

• PathologyChristopher Fletcher, MDJonathan Fletcher, MD

Page 22: Surgical Management of Advanced GIST Following KIT-Directed Therapy
Page 23: Surgical Management of Advanced GIST Following KIT-Directed Therapy

Surgical ComplicationsNo. Patients

Post-operative bleeding requiring re-operation 2

Anastomotic leak 3

Enterocutaneous fistula 2

Abscess requiring drainage 4

Ureteral leak 1

Wound infection requiring readmission 1

Urinary tract infection 2

Prolonged ileus 2

Urinary retention 1

Delayed gastric emptying 2

Postoperative myocardial infarction 1

Postoperative atrial fibrillation 1

Pulmonary embolus 1

Transfusion reaction 1

Page 24: Surgical Management of Advanced GIST Following KIT-Directed Therapy

Surgical Complications

• Overall complication rate 33%

• Complication rate, generalized progression pts 50%

• Complication rate, emergency surgery 40%

Page 25: Surgical Management of Advanced GIST Following KIT-Directed Therapy

Postoperative Therapy

Treatment RegimenNo. Patients (%)

N=69

Imatinib alone 33 (48)

Sunitinib alone 19 (28)

Imatinib, then sunitinib 10 (14)

Imatinib, then phase I agent 3 (4)

Imatinib, then sunitinib, then phase I agent 2 (3)

Sunitinib, then imatinib plus rapamycin 1 (1.5)

No additional therapy 1 (1.5)