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Update from ASCO 2022 – Rectal cancer & mCRC

Update from ASCO 2022 – Rectal cancer & mCRC

Prof. Chiara Cremolini provides her perspectives on two late-breaking abstracts on rectal cancer and metastatic colorectal cancer

Prof. Chiara Cremolini provides her perspectives on two late-breaking abstracts on rectal cancer and metastatic colorectal cancer

Prof. Chiara Cremolini

Listen to Prof Chiara Cremolini discussing two key abstracts presented at ASCO 2022

Portrait of Chiara Cremolini
Prof. Chiara Cremolini

Medical Oncologist

Pisa University Hospital

Italy

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time | open 2 min | Jun 2022

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I am Chiara Cremolini and today I bring to you from ASCO 2022 some interesting results that have been presented.

Single agent PD-1 blockade as curative-intent treatment in mismatch repair deficient locally advanced rectal cancer. Cercek A, et al. Abstract LBA5

In particular an interesting phase 2 trial conducted by the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center Group was presented today dealing with the treatment of patients with locally advanced rectal cancer, but in particular of patients with deficient mismatch repair or microsatellite unstable tumours.

We already knew about the impressive results achieved with immunotherapy in the metastatic setting in dMMR patients. But now we have evidence from 14 patients enrolled in this trial that using immunotherapy may avoid operative management of these patients. Only 14 patients with dMMR rectal cancer in clinical stage 2 or 3 received up to six months of an anti PD-1 monoclonal antibody, dostarlimab, and then underwent a reassessment of their disease by means of pelvic MRI, digital examination and endoscopic assessment. In all of these patients a complete clinical response was observed.

So definitely we have only preliminary results at the relatively short follow up but definitely these results are potentially practice changing. Tomorrow in my clinic, I would pretty much love to offer an immunotherapy approach, an immunotherapy strategy to locally advanced dMMR, MSI high patients in order to avoid both chemo radiation and surgery in their therapeutic route.

Read the publication online in the NEJM

Panitumumab plus mFOLFOX6 versus bevacizumab plus mFOLFOX6 as first-line treatment in patients with RAS wild-type mCRC: Results from the phase 3 PARADIGM trial. Yoshino T, et al. Abstract LBA1

Another trial in the field of metastatic colorectal cancer was presented in the plenary session. It was the PARADIGM trial, a phase 3 randomised study where RAS wild-type, untreated, un-resectable metastatic colorectal cancer patients who were randomised to receive FOLFOX with either the anti-EGFR panitumumab or the anti-angiogenic bevacizumab.

And interestingly, the primary endpoint of this study was the overall survival in the left-sided subgroup, it has shown a clear advantage in terms of overall survival from starting the therapeutic route of these patients with the FOLFOX plus panitumumab instead of bevacizumab with a 3.6 absolute difference in terms of median overall survival and significant benefits in terms of the response rate and the secondary resection of metastasis.

Overall, this data confirms that in these patients with the left-sided RAS wild-type tumours starting the therapeutic route with an anti-EGFR based regimen is beneficial, while this is not the the same for patients with the right-sided tumours where overall both doublet plus BEV and doublet plus panitumumab provided really disappointing results and we need something different.

So tomorrow my clinical practice will not change too much based on this data because I already used to have doublet plus anti-EGFR as a preferred choice for RAS wild-type left-sided patients but definitely I think now that this is now a solid standard.

Prof. Chiara Cremolini reviews two late-breaking abstracts from the meeting:

    • Single agent PD-1 blockade as curative-intent treatment in mismatch repair deficient locally advanced rectal cancer. Cercek A, et al. Abstract LBA5
    • Panitumumab plus mFOLFOX6 versus bevacizumab plus mFOLFOX6 as first-line treatment in patients with RAS wild-type mCRC: Results from the phase 3 PARADIGM trial. Yoshino T, et al. Abstract LBA1

For news on other ASCO 2022 late-breakers covering sarcoma, breast cancer and multiple myeloma visit our summary video here

GI CONNECT is an initiative of COR2ED, supported by an Independent Educational Grant from Bayer.

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