JHEP Reports (Mar 2022)

Outcomes in patients receiving palliative chemotherapy for advanced biliary tract cancer

  • Felix Thol,
  • Simon Johannes Gairing,
  • Carolin Czauderna,
  • Thomas Thomaidis,
  • Thomas Gamstätter,
  • Yvonne Huber,
  • Johanna Vollmar,
  • Johanna Lorenz,
  • Maurice Michel,
  • Fabian Bartsch,
  • Lukas Müller,
  • Roman Kloeckner,
  • Peter Robert Galle,
  • Marcus-Alexander Wörns,
  • Jens Uwe Marquardt,
  • Markus Moehler,
  • Arndt Weinmann,
  • Friedrich Foerster

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 3
p. 100417

Abstract

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Background & Aims: Advanced biliary tract cancer (ABTC) is associated with a poor prognosis. Real-world data on the outcome of patients with ABTC undergoing sequential chemotherapies remain scarce, and little is known about treatment options beyond the established first- and second-line treatments with gemcitabine + cisplatin and FOLFOX. This study aimed to evaluate the outcome of patients with regard to different oncological therapies and to identify prognostic factors. Methods: From January 2010 until December 2019, 142 patients started palliative chemotherapy at our tertiary care liver center. Overall survival (OS) was calculated using Kaplan-Meier plots. Prognostic factors were evaluated using cox proportional-hazards. Results: Patients received a median number of 2 lines of chemotherapy. Median OS was 6.7, 15.2 and 18.2 months for patients who received 1, 2 and 3 lines of chemotherapy, respectively. Patients treated with FOLFIRINOX had a significantly extended OS of 23.8 months (log-rank test: p = 0.018). The univariate cox regression analysis identified several clinical parameters associated with survival (e.g. albumin, bilirubin, carcinoembryonic antigen, carbohydrate antigen 19-9 levels). Conclusions: Our study provides real-world data on the prognosis of ABTC including survival times for patients receiving third and later lines of chemotherapy. Lay summary: Real-world data depicting the outcome of patients with advanced biliary tract cancer outside the framework of controlled trials remain rare despite being extremely important for clinical decision-making. This study therefore provides important real-world data on the established first- and second-line treatments with gemcitabine + cisplatin and FOLFOX, as well as on other chemotherapy regimens or later lines of chemotherapy. It further demonstrates that the use of FOLFIRINOX is associated with promising survival and that there is an association between various clinical parameters such as pre-therapeutic albumin, bilirubin or carbohydrate antigen 19-9 levels and survival.

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