Associating Liver Partition With Portal Vein Ligation for Staged Hepatectomy (ALPPS) vs. Conventional Two-Stage Hepatectomy (TSH) for Surgical Treatment of Marginally Resectable Colorectal Liver Metastases (CRLM) - A Multicentric, Randomized Controlled Trial
Overview
- Phase
- Not Applicable
- Sponsor
- University of Zurich
- Enrollment
- 214
- Locations
- 1
- Primary Endpoint
- 1 Year Disease-free Survival
Overview
Brief Summary
Surgical resection has offered the best option for prolonged survival in patients with colorectal liver metastases. Limiting factor for major liver resections is the size of the future liver remnant (FLR). In case of normal liver function, 30% of the total liver volume is considered to be sufficient to maintain adequate liver function after resection. In an attempt to further increase "resectability" criteria for patients with too small FLR surgical and interventional maneuvers such as portal vein embolization and portal vein ligation in two-stage hepatectomies have been implemented, but they need an interval of 4-8 weeks to achieve sufficient hypertrophy. In order to obtain adequate but rapid parenchymal hypertrophy a new surgical two-step technique, ALPPS, was introduced for oncological patients requiring extended hepatic resection with limited functional reserve. Both procedures can be performed with acceptable morbidity and mortality.
The investigators conclude that it is time to perform a randomized study comparing the two surgical approaches in regard to oncological outcome.
Study Design
- Study Type
- Interventional
- Allocation
- Randomized
- Intervention Model
- Parallel
- Primary Purpose
- Treatment
- Masking
- Single (Outcomes Assessor)
Eligibility Criteria
- Ages
- 18 Years to — (Adult, Older Adult)
- Sex
- All
- Accepts Healthy Volunteers
- No
Inclusion Criteria
- •Patients fulfilling all of the following inclusion criteria may be enrolled in the study:
- •Male or female patients above 18 years of age.
- •Patients with multifocal CRLM with a FLR/TLV (Total Liver Volume)\< 30% OR a FLR/BW (Bodyweight) ratio of \< 0.
- •Patients with colorectal primary tumor not yet resected may be included as long as the extrahepatic disease may be cured surgically (liver first strategy).
- •Patients with lung metastases may be included in the study as long as the lung metastases are potentially curable by resection by judgment of a thoracic surgery consultant.
- •Chemotherapy response according to RECIST: regression or stable disease.
- •The indication for surgery should be discussed at a multidisciplinary tumor board attended by hepatobiliary surgeons, oncologists, hepatologists and radiologists.
- •Written informed consent given by the patient after discussing the trial with the patient in a language he/she understands.
- •For women of chlidbearing age: Not currently breastfeeding; usage of effective contraception if sexually active; not pregnant and agreement not to become pregnant during the 12 months thereafter. A negative pregnancy test before inclusion into the trial is required for women, who are not yet menopausal, had their last menses within less than 12 months or have not had uterus and or ovaries removed surgically or undergone tubal ligation.
Exclusion Criteria
- •The presence of any one of the following exclusion criteria will lead to exclusion of the participant:
- •Male or female patients under 18 years of age.
- •Unilobar tumorload qualifying the subject for a standard hepatectomy.
- •Patients with multifocal CRLM with a FLR/TLV \> 30% OR a FLR/BW ratio of \> 0.
- •Patients with a baseline FLR of less than 15%.
- •Patients with extrahepatic metastatic disease (except potentially resectable lung metastases).
- •Patients not having received chemotherapy before study enrollment.
- •If the liver biopsy prior to enrollment or the first liver biopsy in stage I shows fibrosis (Metavir stage ≥F3) or \>30% macrosteatosis.
- •Significant concomitant diseases making the patient unsuitable for major liver surgery by the judgment of the physicians involved.
- •Known or suspected non-compliance (e.g. drug- and/or alcohol abuse).
Outcomes
Primary Outcomes
1 Year Disease-free Survival
Time Frame: 1 year after Randomization
The primary objective will be disease-free survival at one year after randomization as determined by PET-CT (Positron emission tomography - Computer tomography), when not available by CT (Computer tomography) Thorax/Abdomen. This will be assessed by two independent radiologists who will be blinded to which arm the patient was enrolled in. Patients who died, are lost to follow up or are too sick to undergo imaging will be censored and counted as failures to reach the primary endpoint. Patients may need resection of their primary tumor after the study intervention (liver first strategy). They may develop recurrence within the study period, systemic or in the liver. In these patients ablation, reoperation and chemotherapy are used as customary clinical routine. Whether they achieved tumor free survival however depends only on the PET-CT or CT Thorax Abdomen at one year.
Secondary Outcomes
- Procedure-associated Mortality(Up to 1 year after Randomization)
- Procedure-associated Complications(Up to 1 year after Randomization)
- Percentage of patients in which complete curative two-staged surgery was possible.(Up to 1 year after Randomization)
- Complete (R0) vs. incomplete (R1/2) resection (oncological outcome)(1 year after Randomization)
- Overall survival (oncological outcome)(Up to 10 years after Randomization)
- Quality of Life (QoL)(Up to 1 year after Randomization)
- Radiographic liver volumetric changes(Up to 1 year after Randomization)
- Incidence of posthepatectomy liver failure(Up to 1 year after Randomization)
- Incidence of posthepatectomy renal failure(Up to 1 year after Randomization)