4.2 Article

The role of multimodal salvage therapy in the management of recurrent adrenocortical carcinoma

Journal

JAPANESE JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/jjco/hyac207

Keywords

salvage surgery; radiotherapy; chemotherapy; multimodal therapy; recurrent adrenocortical carcinoma

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This study assessed the long-term outcomes for patients with recurrent adrenocortical carcinoma after multimodal salvage therapy and found that long-term disease control and survival could be achieved in highly selected patients using a multidisciplinary approach. Salvage surgery may be considered in patients with limited recurrent sites and positive response to chemotherapy/chemoradiotherapy.
Background Adrenocortical carcinoma is an aggressive tumor which often recurs despite apparent complete resection. This study assessed the long-term outcomes for patients with recurrent adrenocortical carcinoma after multimodal salvage therapy with chemotherapy, chemoradiotherapy and surgery. Methods We retrospectively reviewed medical records of patients who had a pathological diagnosis of adrenocortical carcinoma between 1996 and 2017. Kaplan-Meier curves were used to assess progression-free and cancer-specific survivals among all patients and cancer-specific survival among patients with tumor recurrence. Log-rank test was used to compare patient survivals by modality of salvage therapy (chemotherapy, chemoradiotherapy and chemotherapy/chemoradiotherapy plus surgery). Results Of 20 patients who underwent initial surgery, recurrence occurred in 14 (70%) with a median interval of 7.5 (range 1.0-12.6) months. Salvage therapy provided was chemotherapy only (n = 7), chemoradiotherapy (n = 2) and chemotherapy/chemoradiotherapy plus surgery (n = 5). Of the five patients who received salvage surgery, three underwent repeated resections. The potential benefit of multimodal salvage therapy was suggested in five patients (4 with chemotherapy/chemoradiotherapy plus surgery and 1 with chemoradiotherapy) who achieved durable disease control (cancer-specific survival from initial recurrence, 22-258 months). With a median follow-up of 25 months from recurrence, the 5-year cancer-specific survival rate was 58%. cancer-specific survival after recurrence was prolonged in patients with <= stage 3 disease, positive response to chemotherapy/chemoradiotherapy and salvage surgery. Conclusions Long-term disease control and survival could be achieved in highly selected patients with recurrent adrenocortical carcinoma using a multidisciplinary approach. Patients who had relatively limited recurrent sites and responded well to chemotherapy/chemoradiotherapy may be considered for salvage surgery on a case-by-case basis. For patients with recurrent adrenocortical carcinoma, multimodality salvage therapy including salvage surgery may be considered, especially if the recurrent lesion was successfully treated with chemotherapy or chemoradiotherapy.

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