Neoadjuvant Therapy Is Associated with Improved Chemotherapy Delivery and Overall Survival Compared to Upfront Resection in Pancreatic Cancer without Increasing Perioperative Complications

Author:

Deig Christopher Ryan,Sutton Thomas LeeORCID,Beneville Blake,Trone Kristin,Stratton Amanda,Gunesch Ali N.,Liu Amy Ivy,Alrohaibani Alaaeddin,Mohebnasab MaedehORCID,Bassale Solange,Grossblatt-Wait Alison,Keith Dove,Attia Fouad,Gilbert Erin W.,Lopez Charles D.,Kardosh AdelORCID,Chen Emerson Y.,Bensch Kenneth G.,Nabavizadeh Nima,Thomas Charles R.,Mayo Skye C.,Sheppard Brett C.,Grossberg AaronORCID

Abstract

The role of neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy and/or chemotherapy (neoCHT) in patients with pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is poorly defined. We hypothesized that patients who underwent neoadjuvant therapy (NAT) would have improved systemic therapy delivery, as well as comparable perioperative complications, compared to patients undergoing upfront resection. This is an IRB-approved retrospective study of potentially resectable PDAC patients treated within an academic quaternary referral center between 2011 and 2018. Data were abstracted from the electronic medical record using an institutional cancer registry and the National Surgical Quality Improvement Program. Three hundred and fourteen patients were eligible for analysis and eighty-one patients received NAT. The median overall survival (OS) was significantly improved in patients who received NAT (28.6 vs. 20.1 months, p = 0.014). Patients receiving neoCHT had an overall increased mean duration of systemic therapy (p < 0.001), and the median OS improved with each month of chemotherapy delivered (HR = 0.81 per month CHT, 95% CI (0.76–0.86), p < 0.001). NAT was not associated with increases in early severe post-operative complications (p = 0.47), late leaks (p = 0.23), or 30–90 day readmissions (p = 0.084). Our results show improved OS in patients who received NAT, driven largely by improved chemotherapy delivery, without an apparent increase in early or late perioperative complications compared to patients undergoing upfront resection.

Funder

National Cancer Institute

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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