Colorado [US]: A randomised clinical trial has found that treating pancreatic cancer patients with chemotherapy before surgery significantly improved 1-year survival rates compared to immediate surgery. Published in The Lancet Gastroenterology & Hepatology, the study was led by the University of Liverpool on behalf of the European Study Group for Pancreatic Cancer (ESPAC) and supported by Cancer Research UK. Around 10,500 people a year in the UK are diagnosed with pancreatic cancer, but it has the lowest cancer survival rate with around 9,000 dying every year.
Pancreatic cancer is challenging cancer to treat, with surgery being the preferred treatment. When cancer involves the local blood vessels (known as 'borderline resectable' cancer) the possibility of surgical removal is less than 50 per cent and the outcomes are poor. However, the use of chemotherapy or chemoradiotherapy before attempting surgery (neoadjuvant therapy) may increase the possibility of surgical removal and improve survival.
The ESPAC-5 trial aimed to compare the use of three different types of short-course neoadjuvant therapy versus immediate surgery in patients with borderline resectable pancreatic cancer, to see whether this approach could improve patient outcomes. The team recruited 90 patients in the UK and Germany between 2014 and 2018 and randomly allocated them to different treatment groups and followed them up for 12 months.
Some patients had surgery as their first treatment, some had chemotherapy before surgery, and others had a combination of chemotherapy and radiotherapy (chemoradiotherapy) before surgery. The researchers found that neoadjuvant therapy provided a significant survival benefit for patients.