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• Pancho trial (p53-adapted neoadjuvant chemotherapy for resectable esophageal cancer) completed—mutation rate of the marker higher than expected.

Authors :
Kappel-Latif, Sonja
Zacherl, Johannes
Hejna, Michael
Westerhoff, Maria
Tamandl, Dietmar
Ba-Ssalamah, Ahmed
Mittlböck, Martina
Wolf, Brigitte
Wrba, Friedrich
Kührer, Irene
Pluschnig, Ursula
Schoppmann, Sebastian F.
Függer, Reinhold
Zwrtek, Ronald
Glaser, Karl
Karner, Josef
Längle, Friedrich
Wenzl, Etienne
Roka, Rudolf
Öfner, Dietmar
Source :
European Surgery: ACA Acta Chirurgica Austriaca; Aug2018, Vol. 50 Issue 4, p160-166, 7p
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Background: In operable esophageal cancer patients, neoadjuvant therapy benefits only those who respond to the treatment. The • Pancho trial represents the first prospective randomized trial evaluating the relevance of the mark53 status for predicting the effect of two different neoadjuvant chemotherapies.Method: Biomarker analysis was conducted using the mark53 analysis. Calculation of patient number needed was based on a 60% rate of marker positivity, deduced from the results of a phase II pilot study.Results: From 2007-2012, the • Pancho trial recruited 235 patients with operable esophageal cancer in Austria. A total of 181 patients were eligible and could be subjected to mark53 analysis and randomization. After randomizing 74 patients, the overall TP53 mutation rate was 79%. However, due to the high prevalence of marker positivity, the number of projected patients was increased to 181 patients in order to ensure a sufficient number of marker-negative patients. After completion of the trial, the overall TP53 mutation rate was 77.9%.Conclusion: Due to high medical need, the recruitment for the academic trial was excellent. Mark53 analysis clearly detected more mutations in the TP53 gene as compared to the cancer-specific p53 literature. Final analysis examining the interaction between the mark53 status and the effect of chemotherapies applied in the • Pancho trial is now awaited. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16828631
Volume :
50
Issue :
4
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
European Surgery: ACA Acta Chirurgica Austriaca
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
130842619
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10353-018-0527-z