TY - JOUR
T1 - 3rd St. Gallen EORTC Gastrointestinal Cancer Conference
T2 - Consensus recommendations on controversial issues in the primary treatment of pancreatic cancer
AU - Lutz, Manfred P.
AU - Zalcberg, John R.
AU - Ducreux, Michel
AU - Aust, Daniela
AU - Bruno, Marco J.
AU - Büchler, Markus W.
AU - Delpero, Jean Robert
AU - Gloor, Beat
AU - Glynne-Jones, Rob
AU - Hartwig, Werner
AU - Huguet, Florence
AU - Laurent-Puig, Pierre
AU - Lordick, Florian
AU - Maisonneuve, Patrick
AU - Mayerle, Julia
AU - Martignoni, Marc
AU - Neoptolemos, John
AU - Rhim, Andrew D.
AU - Schmied, Bruno M.
AU - Seufferlein, Thomas
AU - Werner, Jens
AU - van Laethem, Jean Luc
AU - Otto, Florian
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 The Authors
PY - 2017/7/1
Y1 - 2017/7/1
N2 - The primary treatment of pancreatic cancer was the topic of the 3rd St. Gallen Conference 2016. A multidisciplinary panel reviewed the current evidence and discussed controversial issues in a moderated consensus session. Here we report on the key expert recommendations. It was generally accepted that radical surgical resection followed by adjuvant chemotherapy offers the only evidence-based treatment with a chance for cure. Initial staging should classify localised tumours as resectable or unresectable (i.e. locally advanced pancreatic cancer) although there remains a large grey-zone of potentially resectable disease between these two categories which has recently been named as borderline resectable, a concept which was generally accepted by the panel members. However, the definition of these borderline-resectable (BR) tumours varies between classifications due to their focus on either (i) technical hurdles (e.g. the feasibility of vascular resection) or (ii) oncological outcome (e.g. predicting the risk of a R1 resection and/or occult metastases). The resulting expert discussion focussed on imaging standards as well as the value of pretherapeutic laparoscopy. Indications for biliary drainage were seen especially before neoadjuvant therapy. Following standard resection, the panel unanimously voted for the use of adjuvant chemotherapy after R0 resection and considered it as a reasonable standard of care after R1 resection, even though the optimal pathologic evaluation and the definition of R0/R1 was the issue of an ongoing debate. The general concept of BR tumours was considered as a good basis to select patients for preoperative therapy, albeit its current impact on the therapeutic strategy was far less clear. Main focus of the conference was to discuss the limits of surgical resection and to identify ways to standardise procedures and to improve curative outcome, including adjuvant and perioperative treatment.
AB - The primary treatment of pancreatic cancer was the topic of the 3rd St. Gallen Conference 2016. A multidisciplinary panel reviewed the current evidence and discussed controversial issues in a moderated consensus session. Here we report on the key expert recommendations. It was generally accepted that radical surgical resection followed by adjuvant chemotherapy offers the only evidence-based treatment with a chance for cure. Initial staging should classify localised tumours as resectable or unresectable (i.e. locally advanced pancreatic cancer) although there remains a large grey-zone of potentially resectable disease between these two categories which has recently been named as borderline resectable, a concept which was generally accepted by the panel members. However, the definition of these borderline-resectable (BR) tumours varies between classifications due to their focus on either (i) technical hurdles (e.g. the feasibility of vascular resection) or (ii) oncological outcome (e.g. predicting the risk of a R1 resection and/or occult metastases). The resulting expert discussion focussed on imaging standards as well as the value of pretherapeutic laparoscopy. Indications for biliary drainage were seen especially before neoadjuvant therapy. Following standard resection, the panel unanimously voted for the use of adjuvant chemotherapy after R0 resection and considered it as a reasonable standard of care after R1 resection, even though the optimal pathologic evaluation and the definition of R0/R1 was the issue of an ongoing debate. The general concept of BR tumours was considered as a good basis to select patients for preoperative therapy, albeit its current impact on the therapeutic strategy was far less clear. Main focus of the conference was to discuss the limits of surgical resection and to identify ways to standardise procedures and to improve curative outcome, including adjuvant and perioperative treatment.
KW - Adjuvant
KW - Consensus
KW - EORTC
KW - Neoadjuvant
KW - Pancreatic cancer
KW - St. Gallen
KW - Surgery
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85018322646&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.ejca.2017.03.022
DO - 10.1016/j.ejca.2017.03.022
M3 - Article
C2 - 28460245
AN - SCOPUS:85018322646
SN - 0959-8049
VL - 79
SP - 41
EP - 49
JO - European Journal of Cancer
JF - European Journal of Cancer
ER -