Surgery versus thermal ablation for small-size colorectal liver metastases (COLLISION): An international, multicenter, phase III randomized controlled trial.
Martijn R. Meijerink, Susan van der Lei, Madelon Dijkstra, Kathelijn S. Versteeg, Tineke E. Buffart, Birgit I. Lissenberg‐Witte, Rutger‐Jan Swijnenburg, M. Petrousjka van den Tol, Robbert S. Puijk
- Year
- 2024
- Citations
- 47
Abstract
LBA3501 Background: The standard of care for local treatment of patients (pts) with colorectal liver metastases (CRLM) is surgical resection. However, growing evidence suggests thermal ablation to be associated with a superior safety profile, lower costs, and shorter hospital stay, while rivaling surgical resection in terms of local control and overall survival (OS). This study aimed to explore the potential non-inferiority of thermal ablation compared to surgical resection for pts with small-size (≤3cm) resectable CRLM. Methods: In this multicenter, phase 3 Dutch Colorectal Cancer Group trial, pts aged 18 years and older with previously untreated CRLM were recruited from 14 centers in the Netherlands, Belgium and Italy. Pts with ≤10 CRLM, no extrahepatic metastases and ECOG 0-2 were stratified into low, intermediate and high disease burden subgroups and randomly assigned (1:1) to undergo surgical resection or thermal ablation. Though approach was left at the discretion of the operator, laparoscopic (+/- robot) resections and percutaneous ablations were favored over open procedures. To avoid drop-outs patients undergoing open procedures were randomized intra-operatively. The primary outcome was overall survival (OS) (log-rank; power 80%, 5% type I error rate; 1-sided). Secondary outcomes include distant and local tumor progression-free survival (PFS), local control, safety, length of hospital stay, quality of life and cost-effectiveness. Results: A total of 341 patients were enrolled; 299 were randomly assigned: 147 assigned to thermal ablation, 148 to surgical resection; 4 were excluded after randomization for not having the disease assessed. The trial was stopped at halftime for having met predefined stopping rules. After a median follow-up time of 28.8 months there was no difference regarding OS (HR 1.042; 95% CI, 0.689-1.576; p = 0.846) with a conditional probability of >90% to prove the hypothesis of non-inferiority. Procedure related mortality was 2.1% (n=3) for resection vs. 0% (n=0) for thermal ablation. The total number of adverse events (p = <0.001), the length of hospital stay (median 4 days [range 1-36] vs 1 day [range 1-44], p = <0.001) and local control also favored thermal ablation (HR 0.184; 95% CI, 0.040-0.838; p = 0.029). No differences were found regarding local (HR 0.833; 95% CI, 0.473-1.469; p = 0.528) and distant PFS (HR 0.982; 95% CI, 0.739-1.303; p = 0898). Conclusions: In conclusion, transitioning from surgical resection to thermal ablation as standard of care for patients with small-size (≤3 cm) CRLM would reduce complications, shorten hospital stay and improve local control, without compromising disease-free and overall survival. COLLISION is funded by a Medtronic-Covidien Investigator Sponsored Research grant. Clinical trial information: NCT03088150 .
Keywords
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