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Concurrent Radiotherapy and Panitumumab after Lymph Node Dissection and Induction Chemotherapy for Invasive Bladder Cancer.

Elisabeth E Fransen van de Putte ,
Floris Pos ,
Barry Doodeman ,
Bas W G van Rhijn ,
Elsbeth van der Laan ,
Petra Nederlof ,
Michiel S van der Heijden ,
Jolanda Bloos-van der Hulst ,
Joyce Sanders ,
Annegien Broeks ,
J Martijn Kerst ,
Vincent van der Noort ,
Simon Horenblas ,
Andries M Bergman

Abstract

MATERIALS AND METHODS

Patients with cT1-4N0-2M0 bladder cancer were treated with pelvic lymph node dissection and 4 cycles of platinum based induction chemotherapy followed by a 6½-week schedule of weekly panitumumab (2.5 mg/kg) and concurrent radiotherapy to the bladder (33 × 2 Gy). As the primary objective we compared concurrent radiotherapy and panitumumab toxicity to a historical control toxicity rate of concurrent cisplatin/radiotherapy (less than 35% of patients with Grade 3-5 toxicity). A sample size of 31 patients was estimated. Secondary end points included complete remission at 3-month followup, the bladder preservation rate, EGFR (epidermal growth factor receptor) expression and RAS mutational status.

CONCLUSIONS

Concurrent radiotherapy and panitumumab following induction chemotherapy and pelvic lymph node dissection has a safety profile that is noninferior to the historical profile of concurrent cisplatin/radiotherapy. The high complete remission and bladder preservation rates are promising and warrant further study.

RESULTS

Of the 38 cases initially included in this study 34 were staged cN0. After pelvic lymph node dissection 7 cases (21%) were up staged to pN+. Of the 38 patients 31 started concurrent radiotherapy and panitumumab. During concurrent radiotherapy and panitumumab 5 patients (16%, 95% CI 0-31) experienced systemic or local grade 3-4 toxicity. Four patients did not complete treatment due to adverse events. Complete remission was achieved in 29 of 31 patients (94%, 95% CI 83-100). At a median followup of 34 months 4 patients had local recurrence, for which 3 (10%) underwent salvage cystectomy. Two tumors showed EGFR or RAS mutation while 84% showed positive EGFR expression.

PURPOSE

In this prospective study we evaluated the safety and efficacy of concurrent radiotherapy and panitumumab following neoadjuvant/induction chemotherapy and pelvic lymph node dissection as a bladder preserving therapy for invasive bladder cancer.

More about this publication

The Journal of urology

Volume 201
Issue nr. 3
Pages 478-485
Publication date 01-03-2019

Full text links

Publisher website (DOI) 10.1016/j.juro.2018.10.007
Europe PubMed Central 30321552
Pubmed 30321552

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