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Stereotactic ablative radiotherapy versus standard of care palliative treatment in patients with oligometastatic cancers (SABR-COMET)

Authors :
Stephen Harrow
Sashendra Senthi
Mitchell Liu
Liam Mulroy
Belal Ahmad
Michael Lock
Gwendolyn H.M.J. Griffioen
Karen Moore
George Rodrigues
Cornelis J.A. Haasbeek
Anand Swaminath
Glenn Bauman
Devin Schellenberg
Brian Yaremko
Stewart Gaede
Robert Olson
Alexander V. Louie
Andrew Warner
Suresh Senan
David A. Palma
S. Currie
Neil Kopek
Radiation Oncology
CCA - Cancer Treatment and quality of life
Source :
Lancet, 393(10185), 2051-2058. Elsevier Limited, Palma, D A, Olson, R, Harrow, S, Gaede, S, Louie, A V, Haasbeek, C, Mulroy, L, Lock, M, Rodrigues, G B, Yaremko, B P, Schellenberg, D, Ahmad, B, Griffioen, G, Senthi, S, Swaminath, A, Kopek, N, Liu, M, Moore, K, Currie, S, Bauman, G S, Warner, A & Senan, S 2019, ' Stereotactic ablative radiotherapy versus standard of care palliative treatment in patients with oligometastatic cancers (SABR-COMET) : a randomised, phase 2, open-label trial ', Lancet, vol. 393, no. 10185, pp. 2051-2058 . https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(18)32487-5
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Background: The oligometastatic paradigm suggests that some patients with a limited number of metastases might be cured if all lesions are eradicated. Evidence from randomised controlled trials to support this paradigm is scarce. We aimed to assess the effect of stereotactic ablative radiotherapy (SABR) on survival, oncological outcomes, toxicity, and quality of life in patients with a controlled primary tumour and one to five oligometastatic lesions. Methods: This randomised, open-label phase 2 study was done at 10 hospitals in Canada, the Netherlands, Scotland, and Australia. Patients aged 18 or older with a controlled primary tumour and one to five metastatic lesions, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group score of 0–1, and a life expectancy of at least 6 months were eligible. After stratifying by the number of metastases (1–3 vs 4–5), we randomly assigned patients (1:2) to receive either palliative standard of care treatments alone (control group), or standard of care plus SABR to all metastatic lesions (SABR group), using a computer-generated randomisation list with permuted blocks of nine. Neither patients nor physicians were masked to treatment allocation. The primary endpoint was overall survival. We used a randomised phase 2 screening design with a two-sided α of 0·20 (wherein p

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01406736
Volume :
393
Issue :
10185
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Lancet
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a51e9f36d915a1d6e95da03db1395e91
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(18)32487-5