1 | NATURE REVIEWS | CLINICAL ONCOLOGY www.nature.com/nrclinonc
CORRESPONDENCE
Radioembolization for colorectal liver
metastases
Maarten A. D. Vente, Maurice A. A. J. van den Bosch, Marnix G. E. H. Lam
and Johannes F. W. Nijsen
We read with great interest the recent
Review by Nicolay et al.
1
on yttrium-90
radioembolization (
90
Y-RE) in patients
with unresectable colorectal metastases
to the liver (Liver metastases from
colorectal cancer: radioembolization
with systemic therapy. Nat. Rev. Clin.
Oncol. 6, 687–697; 2009). It provided the
reader with a comprehensive overview
of the current status of this relatively
novel technique with respect to this type
of cancer. However, we would like to
take this opportunity to comment on a
misinterpretation that the authors made
when they discussed tumor response data
from the literature. One of the articles
the authors refer to in this section is a
meta-analysis study on
90
Y-RE, authored
by our group.
2
In their discussion of
this study, Nicolay et al.
1
state that we
reported objective response rates (ORRs)
of approximately 80% in patients treated
in a salvage setting, and ORRs >90% in
patients who received radioembolization
as a first-line treatment. This is incorrect
since we did not assess ORR in our meta-
analysis, which is defined as the portion of
patients with complete or partial response,
but instead the reported percentages refer
to ‘any response’ (AR), which comprises
the patients who exhibited complete
response, partial response, and stable
disease. We used AR instead of ORR
because both partial response and stable
disease were not uniformly defined in
the studies that were included in the
meta-analysis, mainly as a consequence
of a difference between the Response
Evaluation Criteria In Solid Tumors
(RECIST)
3
and WHO response criteria.
4
Obviously, due to the combination of
different response categories, AR derived
from a series of studies will generally be
higher than ORR. In fact, based on the raw
data from our meta-analysis,
2
we estimate
ORRs for colorectal cancer metastatic to
the liver to be approximately 80–90% in
patients who received radioembolization
as a first-line treatment, but only about
40% in patients treated in a salvage setting.
That said, with respect to patients treated
with
90
Y-RE in both the first-line and in
a salvage setting, response rate might
actually be considerably higher because
in most studies on
90
Y-RE included in our
meta-analysis, response was measured
by cross-sectional anatomic imaging
techniques (such as CT and MRI) that rely
on tumor size measurement. However, it
is known that lesion size does not always
correlate with tumor response, due to
several peritumoral and endotumoral
processes that can occur post
90
Y-RE
treatment, such as peritumoral edema
and necrosis.
5
The latest RECIST criteria (RECIST 1.1)
6
advise the use of PET using fluorine-18
fluorodeoxyglucose (
18
F-FDG) for
functional assessment of treatment response
in
18
F-FDG-avid cancers, such as colorectal
liver metastases. Most of the literature
on
90
Y-RE reports on tumor response
following treatment, but one might argue
that tumor response should not be the
primary end point. Instead, we contend
that progression-free interval and overall
survival, as well as standardized quality-of-
life measurements, are the preferred end
points in comparative studies. Nicolay et al.
1
mention the two large, ongoing, controlled
trials, in which patients with colorectal
liver metastases are randomly assigned
to receive either systemic chemotherapy
(consisting of oxaliplatin, 5-fluorouracil and
leucovorin [FOLFOX]) or
90
Y-RE with resin
microspheres plus FOLFOX. The primary
end points of these studies are progression-
free interval in the SIRFLOX trial
7
and
overall survival in the FOXFIRE trial.
8
The results of these studies are expected
to provide further insight into the true
added value of this type of internal
radiation therapy.
Department of Radiology and Nuclear
Medicine, University Medical Center Utrecht,
100 Heidelberglaan, Utrecht 3584 CX,
The Netherlands (M. A. D. Vente,
M. A. A. J. van den Bosch, M. G. E. H. Lam,
J. F. W. Nijsen).
Correspondence to: M. A. D. Vente
m.vente@umcutrecht.nl
doi:10.1038/nrclinonc.2009.165-c1
Acknowledgments
M. Wondergem, I. van der Tweel, B. A. Zonnenberg,
and A. D. van het Schip are gratefully acknowledged
for carefully proofreading this Correspondence.
Competing interests
The authors declare no competing interests.
1. Nicolay, N. H., Berry, D. P . & Sharma, R. A.
Liver metastases from colorectal cancer:
radioembolization with systemic therapy.
Nat. Rev. Clin. Oncol. 6, 687–697 (2009).
2. Vente, M. A. et al. Yttrium-90 microsphere
radioembolization for the treatment of liver
malignancies: a structured meta-analysis.
Eur. Radiol. 19, 951–959 (2009).
3. Therasse, P . et al. New guidelines to evaluate
the response to treatment in solid tumors.
European Organization for Research and
Treatment of Cancer, National Cancer Institute
of the United States, National Cancer Institute
of Canada. J. Natl Cancer Inst. 92, 205–216
(2000).
4. Park, J. O. et al. Measuring response in solid
tumors: comparison of RECIST and WHO
response criteria. Jpn J. Clin. Oncol. 33,
533–537 (2003).
5. Atassi, B. et al. Multimodality imaging following
90
Y radioembolization: a comprehensive review
and pictorial essay. Radiographics 28, 81–99
(2008).
6. Eisenhauer, E. A. et al. New response
evaluation criteria in solid tumors: revised
RECIST guideline (version 1.1). Eur. J. Cancer
45, 228–247 (2009).
7. US National Library of Medicine. ClinicalTrials.gov
[online], http://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/
NCT00724503 (2010).
8. Sharma, R. A. et al. FOXFIRE: a phase III clinical
trial of chemo-radio-embolisation as first-line
treatment of liver metastases in patients with
colorectal cancer. Clin. Oncol. (R. Coll. Radiol.)
20, 261–263 (2008).
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