6 research outputs found

    FOLFIRINOX Induction Therapy for Stage 3 Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma

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    ABSTRACT Background. Reports show that FOLFIRINOX therapy for pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) results in objective response rates two to threefold higher than those of other regimens. This study aimed to assess response and resection rates for locally unresectable (stage 3) patients initially treated with induction FOLFIRINOX. Methods. The institutional cancer database was queried for patients treated with induction FOLFIRINOX therapy between 2010 and 2013. Patients were included in the study if they were treated at the authors' institution for stage 3 PDAC (locally unresectable) that had been adjudicated at a weekly multidisciplinary tumor board. Results. The study identified 101 patients. The median age was 64 years (range 37-81 years), and the median followup period was 12 months (range 3-37 months). The patients received a median of six cycles (range 1-20 cycles) of induction FOLFIRINOX. No grade 4 or 5 toxicity was recorded. At the initial restaging (median of 3 months after diagnosis), 23 patients (23 %) had developed distant metastases, 15 patients (15 %) had undergone resection, and 63 patients (63 %) had proceeded to chemoradiation. In the group of 63 patients who had proceeded to chemoradiation (median of 9 months after diagnosis), an additional 16 patients (16 %) had undergone resection, and 5 patients (5 %) had developed metastases. A partial radiographic response was observed in 29 % of all the patients, which was associated with ability to perform resection (p = 0.004). The median overall survival time was 11 months for the group that progressed with FOLFIRINOX and 26 months for the group that did not progress. Conclusion. Nearly one third of the patients who had been initially identified as having stage 3 pancreatic carcinoma and had been treated with FOLFIRINOX responded radiographically and underwent tumor resection. A recently completed phase 3 randomized trial for stage 4 pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) identified FOL-FIRINOX as superior to gemcitabine in terms of radiographic response together with improved progression-free and overall survival. 1 Patients who received FOLFIRINOX experienced a 32 % objective response rate (ORR) compared with 9 % in the gemcitabine arm of the study, which correlated with survival benefit (median overall and progression-free survival, 11 and 6 versus 7 and 3 months, respectively). Retrospective studies of patients with both borderline resectable PDAC (stages 1 and 2) and stage 3 disease (locally unresectable) also have suggested an ORR of approximately 30 % with FOLFIRINOX. 2,3 The reported ORR from non-FOLFIRINOX regimens has generally been in the range of 10 %, including the results of a phase

    Pancreatic cancer exosomes initiate pre-metastatic niche formation in the liver

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    Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinomas (PDACs) are highly metastatic with poor prognosis, mainly due to delayed detection. We hypothesized that intercellular communication is critical for metastatic progression. Here, we show that PDAC-derived exosomes induce liver pre-metastatic niche formation in naive mice and consequently increase liver metastatic burden. Uptake of PDAC-derived exosomes by Kupffer cells caused transforming growth factor β secretion and upregulation of fibronectin production by hepatic stellate cells. This fibrotic microenvironment enhanced recruitment of bone marrow-derived macrophages. We found that macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF) was highly expressed in PDAC-derived exosomes, and its blockade prevented liver pre-metastatic niche formation and metastasis. Compared with patients whose pancreatic tumours did not progress, MIF was markedly higher in exosomes from stage I PDAC patients who later developed liver metastasis. These findings suggest that exosomal MIF primes the liver for metastasis and may be a prognostic marker for the development of PDAC liver metastasis.We thank D. L. Bajor (Vonderheide laboratory, University of Pennsylvania) for the gift of the R6560B cells. We thank L. Bojmar for carefully reviewing the paper. We thank S. Rudchenko and M. Barbu-Stevanovic at the Hospital for Special Surgery Fannie E. Rippel Foundation Flow Cytometry Core Facility for expert flow cytometry. We are supported by grants from the Children’s Cancer and Blood Foundation (H.P., D.L.), Manning Foundation (D.L.), Hartwell Foundation (D.L.), Champalimaud Foundation (D.L.), Fundacao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia (D.L.), Nancy C and Daniel P Paduano Foundation (H.P., D.L.), Mary Kay Foundation (D.L.), Pediatric Oncology Experimental Therapeutic Investigator Consortium (D.L.), James Paduano Foundation (D.L., H.P.), Melanoma Research Alliance (H.P.), Sohn Conference Foundation (H.P.), Beth Tortolani Foundation (D.L., J.B.), Malcolm Hewitt Weiner Foundation (D.L.), Jose Carreras Leukemia Foundation (B.K.T.), Theodore Rapp Foundation (D.L.), American Hellenic Educational Progressive Association 5th District Cancer Research Foundation (D.L.), Charles and Marjorie Holloway Foundation (J.B.), Sussman Family Fund (J.B.), Lerner Foundation (J.B.), Breast Cancer Alliance (J.B.), and Manhasset Women’s Coalition Against Breast Cancer (J.B.).S
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