Metabolic Imaging Predicts Response, Survival, and Recurrence in Adenocarcinomas of the Esophagogastric Junction

Author:

Ott Katja1,Weber Wolfgang A.1,Lordick Florian1,Becker Karen1,Busch Raymonde1,Herrmann Ken1,Wieder Hinrich1,Fink Ulrich1,Schwaiger Markus1,Siewert Jörg-Rüdiger1

Affiliation:

1. From the Departments of Surgery, Nuclear Medicine, Pathology, Internal Medicine III, Medical Statistic, Technische Universität München, Munich, Germany; and the Department of Molecular and Medical Pharmacology, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA

Abstract

PurposeA previous study suggested that measurement of therapy-induced changes in tumor glucose metabolism by positron emission tomography (PET) with the glucose analog [18F]fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) allows to select patients most likely to benefit from preoperative chemotherapy in adenocarcinomas of the esophagogastric junction (AEG). The aim of this study was to prospectively validate these findings by using an a priori definition of metabolic response.Patients and MethodsSixty-five patients with locally advanced AEGs were included. Tumor glucose utilization was quantitatively assessed by FDG-PET before chemotherapy and 14 days after initiation of therapy. Patients were classified as metabolic responders when the metabolic activity of the primary tumor had decreased by more than 35% at the time of the second PET.ResultsMetabolic responders showed a high histopathologic response rate (44%) with a 3-year survival rate of 70%. In contrast, prognosis was poor for metabolic nonresponders with a histopathologic response rate of 5% (P = .001) and a 3-year survival rate of 35% (P = .01). A multivariate analysis (covariates: ypT-, ypN-category, histopathologic response) demonstrated that metabolic response was the only factor predicting recurrence (P = .018) in the subgroup of completely resected (R0) patients.ConclusionThis study prospectively demonstrates that changes in tumor metabolic activity during chemotherapy predict response, prognosis, and recurrence. These data provide the basis for clinical trials in which preoperative treatment is changed for patients without a metabolic response early in the course of therapy. PET-guided induction therapy may even be applicable to earlier tumor stages because surgery is only minimally delayed in nonresponding patients.

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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