SBRT Doubles 5-Year Survival in Oligometastatic Cancers

— Most patients in phase II trial had up to three metastatic lesions

Last Updated October 21, 2018
MedicalToday

SAN ANTONIO -- Aggressive, targeted radiation therapy delayed cancer progression and showed a strong signal toward improving overall survival (OS) in patients with oligometastatic disease, the SABR-COMET study found.

At a median 27 months follow-up, progression-free survival (PFS) was 12 months in patients treated with standard palliative care plus stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) compared with 6 months in those who received palliative care alone (P=0.001), reported David Palma, MD, PhD, of the London Health Sciences Centre in London, Ontario, Canada.

And at 5 years, 46% of patients in the SBRT arm were alive compared with 24% in the control arm. Median OS was numerically better in SBRT-treated patients, at 41 months (95% CI 26 months to not reached) compared with 28 months (95% CI 19 to 33 months) in the control group (P=0.09).

Most of the patients had oligometastatic (≤3 lesions) cancers of the prostate, breast, colon, and lung.

Results of the trial will be presented next week in a plenary session at the American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO) meeting here.

"It's been a big source of controversy as to how to best manage these patients," Palma told . "For many years people have suggested that maybe we should use aggressive treatments like surgery or stereotactic radiation where others said that kind of approach would be futile."

Palma said that he hopes this study, which will continue to follow patients for up to 10 years, will help to reduce that level of controversy. The trial was designed to detect a signal of benefit (P<0.20) but the PFS benefit was found to be definitive.

"The results are very tantalizing in that we're getting 13 months of difference in the survival, and the percentage of patients alive at 5 years is roughly double," said Palma.

"At our center, it's changed how we are practicing," he said, but noted that without the significant improvement in OS, decisions will ultimately come down to the individual oncologist and his or her discussions with patients.

"Many people feel that a progression-free survival benefit is enough to change practice, but others will want more information," he added.

"This study has very exciting implications for patients with metastatic disease, in particular for those with only a couple sites of metastases," James B. Yu, of Yale Cancer Center and Smilow Cancer Hospital in New Haven, Connecticut, told in an email.

"I can envision a future where ever more sophisticated molecularly-targeted therapies and immunotherapies in combination with precisely targeted and non-invasive radiosurgery lead to the cure of previously incurable metastatic disease," said Yu, who was not involved in the study. "There will always be a role for locally directed therapy -- and as radiosurgery gets more precise (with improvements in patient tracking and tumor visualization) and easier to plan and deliver (with artificial intelligence-driven improvements in radiation treatment planning), treatment of multiple lesions will become commonplace."

The open-label SABR-COMET trial enrolled 99 patients from 2012 to 2016 with recurrent cancer and good performance status (ECOG 0-1) from Australia, Canada, Scotland, and the Netherlands. Among the 99 patients, there were 16 with prostate cancer, and 18 with breast, lung, and colorectal cancers each. Patients with up to five metastases were included in the trial, but 93% had between one and three. Some patients who developed additional lesions during the trial were successfully treated with additional ablation.

Palma said that patients with different cancer types were included because SBRT works fairly well regardless of histology and other trials have failed to fully accrue in this setting.

The two groups of patients -- median age 68 and 59% men -- had similar baseline characteristics and were randomized 2:1 to SABR plus standard palliative care or palliative care alone. Adverse events (AEs) grade ≥2 were more common with SBRT (30% vs 9%). Most comment events were fatigue, dyspnea, muscle, joint, bone, or other types of pain. Three deaths occurred in the investigational arm due to AEs.

No differences were seen with regard to quality of life. At 6 months post-treatment, overall scores on the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy General (FACT-G) questionnaire were high in both treatment arms: 82.5 with SBRT versus 82.6 (P=0.992). And no significant differences were seen on the questionnaire's functional, emotional, physical, and social subscales.

A follow-up phase III study, SABR-COMET-3, will test the approach in patients with up to three metastatic lesions, and the phase III SABR-COMET-10 will test this approach with lower SBRT doses in patients with up to 10 lesions.

Disclosures

The study was funded by the Ontario Institute for Cancer Research and a London Regional Cancer Program Catalyst grant.

Primary Source

American Society for Radiation Oncology

Palma DA, et al "Stereotactic Ablative Radiotherapy for the Comprehensive Treatment of Oligometastatic Tumors (SABR-COMET): Results of a randomized trial" ASTRO 2018; Abstract 5.