Recent advances in the management of gastric adenocarcinoma patients.
Kazuto HaradaAnthony LopezNamita ShanbhagBrian BadgwellHideo BabaJaffer AjaniPublished in: F1000Research (2018)
Gastric adenocarcinoma (GAC) is one of the most aggressive malignancies and has a dismal prognosis. Therefore, multimodality therapies to include surgery, chemotherapy, targeted therapy, immunotherapy, and radiation therapy are needed to provide advantage. For locally advanced GAC (>cT1B), the emerging strategies have included preoperative chemotherapy, postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy, and (occasionally) postoperative chemoradiation in various regions. Several novel therapies have been assessed in clinical trials, but only trastuzumab and ramucirumab (alone and in combination with paclitaxel) have shown overall survival advantage. Pembrolizumab has been approved by the US Food and Drug Administration on the basis of response rate only for patients with microsatellite instability (MSI-H) or if PD-L1 expression is positive (≥1% labeling index in tumor/immune cells in the presence of at least 100 tumor cells in the specimen). Nivolumab has been approved in Japan on the basis of a randomized trial showing significant survival advantage for patients who received nivolumab compared with placebo in the third or later lines of therapy. The cure rate of patients with localized GAC in the West is only about 40% and that for metastatic cancer is very poor (only 2-3%). At this stage, much more target discovery is needed through molecular profiling. Personalized therapy of patients with GAC remains a challenge.
Keyphrases
- locally advanced
- drug administration
- radiation therapy
- squamous cell carcinoma
- patients undergoing
- rectal cancer
- clinical trial
- end stage renal disease
- minimally invasive
- papillary thyroid
- newly diagnosed
- ejection fraction
- small molecule
- chronic kidney disease
- small cell lung cancer
- free survival
- high throughput
- magnetic resonance imaging
- coronary artery bypass
- peritoneal dialysis
- randomized controlled trial
- epidermal growth factor receptor
- mesenchymal stem cells
- coronary artery disease
- image quality
- double blind
- lymph node metastasis
- magnetic resonance
- cell therapy
- young adults
- surgical site infection
- study protocol
- tyrosine kinase