All Podcasts
The Evolution of HIPEC in the Treatment of Cancer
Transcript
- 00:00 --> 00:02Funding for Yale Cancer Answers is
- 00:02 --> 00:04provided by Smilow Cancer Hospital.
- 00:06 --> 00:08Welcome to Yale Cancer Answers
- 00:08 --> 00:10with Doctor Anees Chagpar.
- 00:10 --> 00:12Yale Cancer Answers features the
- 00:12 --> 00:14latest information on cancer care
- 00:14 --> 00:15by welcoming oncologists and
- 00:15 --> 00:17specialists who are on the forefront
- 00:17 --> 00:19of the battle to fight cancer.
- 00:19 --> 00:21This week it's a conversation about the
- 00:21 --> 00:23evolution of HIPEC and the treatment
- 00:23 --> 00:25of cancer with Doctor Kiran Turaga.
- 00:25 --> 00:27Doctor Turaga is a professor and
- 00:27 --> 00:29division chief of surgical oncology
- 00:29 --> 00:31at the Yale School of Medicine
- 00:31 --> 00:34where Doctor Chagpar is also a
- 00:34 --> 00:35professor of surgical oncology.
- 00:36 --> 00:38Dr. Turaga, maybe we can start off
- 00:38 --> 00:40by you telling us a little bit more
- 00:40 --> 00:41about yourself and what it is you do.
- 00:43 --> 00:45I'm a surgical oncologist,
- 00:45 --> 00:47which means I'm a cancer surgeon,
- 00:47 --> 00:49cancer first, surgeon second.
- 00:49 --> 00:51But I use surgical techniques
- 00:51 --> 00:54to remove cancers and my
- 00:54 --> 00:56focus has always been on cancers
- 00:56 --> 00:59that spread or are advanced.
- 00:59 --> 01:00Typically these cancers
- 01:00 --> 01:02are called Stage 4 cancers.
- 01:02 --> 01:04And my desire has been to
- 01:04 --> 01:07see how best we can treat these
- 01:07 --> 01:09cancers and potentially lead to
- 01:09 --> 01:11cures even in stage 4 settings.
- 01:12 --> 01:13You know, it's interesting
- 01:13 --> 01:16that you start in that way
- 01:16 --> 01:18because
- 01:18 --> 01:20you said a couple of things that
- 01:20 --> 01:22really tweaked my interest.
- 01:22 --> 01:24First, you said cancer first, surgery 2nd.
- 01:24 --> 01:26And the second thing you said
- 01:26 --> 01:29which was of interest was the fact
- 01:29 --> 01:31that you're interested in advanced
- 01:31 --> 01:33cancers and metastatic cancers.
- 01:33 --> 01:35For most cancers that we deal
- 01:35 --> 01:38with most of the time surgery is
- 01:38 --> 01:40limited to the early setting.
- 01:40 --> 01:44So can you talk a little bit about
- 01:44 --> 01:46how you got interested in advanced
- 01:46 --> 01:48and metastatic cancers even though
- 01:48 --> 01:51you're a surgeon or did that interest
- 01:51 --> 01:54in surgery come after the interest
- 01:54 --> 01:56in advanced and metastatic cancers?
- 01:57 --> 01:58That's a great question.
- 01:58 --> 02:00And my evolution
- 02:00 --> 02:02and interest of both cancer and
- 02:02 --> 02:04surgery was sort of parallel.
- 02:04 --> 02:05You know, I've personally
- 02:05 --> 02:06been affected by cancer.
- 02:06 --> 02:08My grandfather died of lung cancer,
- 02:08 --> 02:09my dad died of liver cancer.
- 02:09 --> 02:14And so there's certainly
- 02:14 --> 02:16a significant personal commitment
- 02:16 --> 02:19to wanting to do better for cancer.
- 02:19 --> 02:21I like doing things with my hands.
- 02:21 --> 02:23In fact, for the longest time I wanted to be
- 02:23 --> 02:26a medical doctor like an oncologist.
- 02:26 --> 02:28And then when I started doing
- 02:28 --> 02:30my rotations in surgery,
- 02:30 --> 02:32I really enjoyed it and I felt the
- 02:32 --> 02:33impact that we could have as surgeons.
- 02:33 --> 02:37And so it was just a marrying of my
- 02:37 --> 02:39two interests that brought me together
- 02:39 --> 02:41to doing oncologic surgery.
- 02:41 --> 02:43And I think you make a very good
- 02:43 --> 02:45point that surgery is
- 02:45 --> 02:47generally applied to tumors that
- 02:47 --> 02:49are early stage or even sometimes
- 02:49 --> 02:50for prevention of cancers.
- 02:50 --> 02:54But I think I was very affected by
- 02:54 --> 02:56many patients that I encountered
- 02:56 --> 02:58during both my training and then
- 02:58 --> 03:00even as a young attending where I
- 03:00 --> 03:02felt that patients who had cancers
- 03:02 --> 03:05that had spread were often treated
- 03:05 --> 03:07more with purely palliative
- 03:07 --> 03:10intent where you're trying to help
- 03:10 --> 03:12them live a little bit longer
- 03:12 --> 03:13with good quality of life,
- 03:13 --> 03:15but perhaps not really thinking
- 03:15 --> 03:17about curative approaches.
- 03:17 --> 03:19And so I started thinking about the
- 03:19 --> 03:21problem and I was fortunate to have
- 03:21 --> 03:22interacted with numerous individuals
- 03:22 --> 03:25that have had similar interests.
- 03:25 --> 03:28And so we were able to think
- 03:28 --> 03:30together about who are the patients
- 03:30 --> 03:32that we can actually be aggressive
- 03:32 --> 03:35even surgically to help think about
- 03:35 --> 03:36more curative intent approaches.
- 03:36 --> 03:38So that's sort of how
- 03:38 --> 03:39my journey evolved.
- 03:41 --> 03:43And so that leads us into
- 03:43 --> 03:46the whole world of of HIPEC.
- 03:46 --> 03:49Can you tell us a little bit
- 03:49 --> 03:52about what exactly it is and for
- 03:52 --> 03:55which patients it is appropriate?
- 03:56 --> 03:59HIPEC is hyperthermic
- 03:59 --> 04:00intraparitoneal chemotherapy.
- 04:00 --> 04:01So I'll tell you a little bit of a story.
- 04:01 --> 04:05Way back even in the 18th century,
- 04:05 --> 04:07there were patients that were
- 04:07 --> 04:08developing malignant ascites.
- 04:08 --> 04:11So they had fluid fill up inside their
- 04:11 --> 04:13abdomen and were very distressed.
- 04:13 --> 04:15And there was a surgeon who actually
- 04:15 --> 04:16put wine or alcohol inside the
- 04:16 --> 04:18abdomen with an intention of seeing
- 04:18 --> 04:20if it would dry up the fluid.
- 04:20 --> 04:22And it did, but unfortunately caused
- 04:22 --> 04:24such a significant reaction that
- 04:24 --> 04:26patients didn't do well from that.
- 04:26 --> 04:28But over the years,
- 04:28 --> 04:31there was this appreciation that cancers,
- 04:31 --> 04:33especially many cancers that start
- 04:33 --> 04:35both in the gastrointestinal tract,
- 04:35 --> 04:37so like our digestive system
- 04:37 --> 04:40and the genital urinary,
- 04:40 --> 04:42essentially in ovarian cancers, can
- 04:42 --> 04:45actually spread to the lining of the abdomen.
- 04:45 --> 04:46And as surgeons,
- 04:46 --> 04:47it was sort of overwhelming
- 04:47 --> 04:49to see the number of tumors
- 04:49 --> 04:51that were inside the abdomen.
- 04:51 --> 04:53And so back in the 1980s,
- 04:53 --> 04:57a concept was developed at the NIH/NCI
- 04:57 --> 04:59where chemotherapy was introduced
- 04:59 --> 05:02directly inside the abdomen at high
- 05:02 --> 05:03concentrations and high temperatures
- 05:03 --> 05:05with the understanding that when
- 05:06 --> 05:07it was delivered like that,
- 05:07 --> 05:11you were delivering a very high topical
- 05:11 --> 05:13concentration of the chemotherapy.
- 05:13 --> 05:14But the systemic absorption,
- 05:14 --> 05:15meaning the absorption
- 05:15 --> 05:17inside the bloodstream was
- 05:17 --> 05:18fairly limited.
- 05:18 --> 05:20And so this was termed different
- 05:20 --> 05:22things over the years.
- 05:22 --> 05:24And then finally in the early 2000s,
- 05:24 --> 05:26the combination of heat,
- 05:26 --> 05:27the intraperitoneal delivery,
- 05:27 --> 05:29meaning putting it inside the abdomen
- 05:30 --> 05:31and the chemotherapy came together
- 05:31 --> 05:33and it started being called HIPEC.
- 05:33 --> 05:35It is really delivering
- 05:35 --> 05:37high concentration chemotherapy at
- 05:37 --> 05:39high temperatures inside the abdomen
- 05:39 --> 05:42to essentially affect cancer cells
- 05:42 --> 05:44that are there after surgery with
- 05:44 --> 05:47an intention of trying to cure it.
- 05:47 --> 05:48It is a technique that's
- 05:48 --> 05:50used for many cancers, like I said.
- 05:52 --> 05:54But the common cancers that are routinely
- 05:54 --> 05:56treated with cytoreductive surgery
- 05:56 --> 05:59are ovarian cancers,
- 05:59 --> 06:01colon cancers, appendix cancers,
- 06:01 --> 06:04mesothelioma, and gastric cancer.
- 06:04 --> 06:05So those are sort of the big
- 06:05 --> 06:07cancer groups that are
- 06:07 --> 06:08often treated with this technique.
- 06:10 --> 06:12One of the other
- 06:12 --> 06:14things that's interesting is that when
- 06:14 --> 06:16we think about metastatic cancer,
- 06:16 --> 06:19most often we think that the cancer has
- 06:19 --> 06:22spread to a different part of the body,
- 06:22 --> 06:23often through the bloodstream.
- 06:23 --> 06:26And so it's interesting that you
- 06:26 --> 06:28mentioned that HIPEC is really
- 06:28 --> 06:32designed to be delivered topically
- 06:32 --> 06:35into the abdomen so that it has
- 06:35 --> 06:38its effect on peritoneal surfaces,
- 06:38 --> 06:40which seems kind of counter to how we
- 06:40 --> 06:42often think about distant metastatic
- 06:42 --> 06:45spread in the sense that we want to
- 06:45 --> 06:47get it into the systemic absorption.
- 06:47 --> 06:50Can you kind of talk about the rationale
- 06:50 --> 06:53behind that and and how that plays in?
- 06:54 --> 06:56Yeah, you know, I think this is actually
- 06:56 --> 06:59a fascinating story of how
- 06:59 --> 07:01medicine has evolved over the century.
- 07:01 --> 07:04So as you know, William Halsted was
- 07:04 --> 07:06a very famous cancer surgeon or a
- 07:06 --> 07:09surgeon at the Johns Hopkins Hospital
- 07:09 --> 07:11and he was of the belief that cancer
- 07:11 --> 07:13went in a very linear progression
- 07:13 --> 07:15and that if there was cancer,
- 07:15 --> 07:17the more aggressive and radical your surgery,
- 07:17 --> 07:19the better the chance of curing it.
- 07:19 --> 07:21So in fact taking out the entire chest
- 07:21 --> 07:23wall for patients with breast cancer,
- 07:23 --> 07:25cutting off legs for patients with
- 07:25 --> 07:27skin cancers on the leg, et cetera.
- 07:27 --> 07:29And that was sort of the way a lot
- 07:29 --> 07:30of cancers were treated all the way
- 07:30 --> 07:32up to the 1960
- 07:32 --> 07:34when nitrogen mustard which came
- 07:34 --> 07:37from World War 2 and chemotherapy
- 07:37 --> 07:39started being developed at that time.
- 07:39 --> 07:41And then subsequently there was the
- 07:41 --> 07:43Fisher's hypothesis which is where
- 07:43 --> 07:44the concept was,
- 07:44 --> 07:47all cancer is metastatic at diagnosis
- 07:47 --> 07:48that there's always cancer cells
- 07:48 --> 07:50or cancer DNA floating around in
- 07:50 --> 07:52your blood streams,
- 07:52 --> 07:54even if it's a very early stage cancer.
- 07:54 --> 07:57And so therefore there needs to be this
- 07:57 --> 07:59appreciation of all cancers have to be
- 07:59 --> 08:01treated with a combination of chemotherapy,
- 08:01 --> 08:04maybe surgery, and that is sort of how
- 08:04 --> 08:07you're trying to affect this entire system.
- 08:07 --> 08:09I think in the 1990s,
- 08:09 --> 08:11a concept called oligometastasis
- 08:11 --> 08:14was proposed by one of my
- 08:14 --> 08:15close friends and colleagues,
- 08:15 --> 08:19Ralph Weichselbaum and Sam Hellman who
- 08:19 --> 08:22noted that maybe the reality wasn't
- 08:22 --> 08:25one of these two hypothesis,
- 08:25 --> 08:27but actually somewhere in the middle
- 08:27 --> 08:29where there were clearly groups of
- 08:29 --> 08:31patients who had cancers that had
- 08:31 --> 08:33spread but had spread in a very unique
- 08:33 --> 08:35way where the spread was limited,
- 08:35 --> 08:38it was limited to a few areas and
- 08:38 --> 08:41when treated locally, meaning with
- 08:41 --> 08:43surgery or radiation or ablation.
- 08:43 --> 08:45So when you're actually working on these,
- 08:45 --> 08:47you can actually potentially cure
- 08:47 --> 08:49these patients of the cancer and
- 08:49 --> 08:51and this observation led to the
- 08:51 --> 08:53coining of the word oligometastases.
- 08:53 --> 08:55And since then there have been
- 08:55 --> 08:57numerous investigations in this
- 08:57 --> 08:58space and it's very fascinating to
- 08:58 --> 09:00think about the peritoneum itself.
- 09:00 --> 09:02The peritoneum is a remarkable barrier,
- 09:02 --> 09:04but if you actually look at it,
- 09:04 --> 09:05the peritoneum is like Saran wrap.
- 09:05 --> 09:07I tell patients it's sort of like
- 09:07 --> 09:09wallpaper on the walls of your rooms.
- 09:09 --> 09:12So it's a very, very thin layer.
- 09:12 --> 09:13But remarkably,
- 09:13 --> 09:14all cancer that generally start
- 09:14 --> 09:17in the peritoneum or in the
- 09:17 --> 09:18peritoneal cavity are actually
- 09:18 --> 09:19limited to that peritoneum.
- 09:19 --> 09:21It rarely invades beyond the peritoneum
- 09:21 --> 09:24into the abdominal wall or musculature,
- 09:24 --> 09:25things like that.
- 09:26 --> 09:28It's interesting when you
- 09:28 --> 09:30actually measure the DNA of cancer
- 09:30 --> 09:32that's present in the blood.
- 09:32 --> 09:34And this is some of our own work
- 09:34 --> 09:35where we've found that the DNA
- 09:35 --> 09:37that's shed by these tumors,
- 09:37 --> 09:38you might have a ton of
- 09:38 --> 09:39cancer inside the peritoneum,
- 09:39 --> 09:40but you barely will have any
- 09:40 --> 09:41DNA or cancer DNA
- 09:41 --> 09:43in the blood as opposed to if
- 09:43 --> 09:45you have one spot in the liver,
- 09:45 --> 09:47one spot in the lungs, you know,
- 09:47 --> 09:48the amount of DNA that's shed in the blood,
- 09:48 --> 09:50especially for colon cancer is tremendous.
- 09:50 --> 09:53So it's a very interesting phenomenon
- 09:53 --> 09:55where this may almost be a sequestered
- 09:55 --> 09:58form of metastases that is happening,
- 09:58 --> 09:59you know, in a certain region.
- 09:59 --> 10:01So I think that is where
- 10:01 --> 10:04the appeal of surgery and delivering
- 10:04 --> 10:05intraperitoneal chemotherapy
- 10:05 --> 10:07is significant in this area.
- 10:07 --> 10:10Yeah, it certainly makes
- 10:10 --> 10:12a whole lot more sense as to why
- 10:12 --> 10:15delivering chemotherapy in a more
- 10:15 --> 10:18topical way for people who have
- 10:18 --> 10:20peritoneal metastases may be beneficial.
- 10:20 --> 10:24Can you talk a little bit about how
- 10:24 --> 10:26efficacious it is in terms of the
- 10:26 --> 10:29response that patients have to HIPEC?
- 10:30 --> 10:32Yeah, I think that's a good
- 10:32 --> 10:33question and it's a complicated
- 10:33 --> 10:35answer because there are numerous
- 10:35 --> 10:38different cancers that are treated
- 10:38 --> 10:39with intraperitoneal chemotherapy.
- 10:39 --> 10:41But for instance,
- 10:41 --> 10:43one of the cancers or one of the
- 10:43 --> 10:45diseases that is often treated with this is
- 10:45 --> 10:47a condition called pseudomyxoma peritonei.
- 10:47 --> 10:49And this is a condition where patients'
- 10:49 --> 10:52abdomens are full of mucus that is
- 10:52 --> 10:54arising either from the appendix or
- 10:54 --> 10:56the ovary and it causes the entire
- 10:56 --> 10:58abdomen to fill up with mucus.
- 10:58 --> 11:01Folks often look like they're
- 11:01 --> 11:0339 weeks pregnant and it's just a very,
- 11:03 --> 11:05very tremendous burden on our patients.
- 11:05 --> 11:07In that population of patients,
- 11:07 --> 11:10especially the low grade tumors,
- 11:10 --> 11:1270% of the patients are cured of this
- 11:12 --> 11:13disease with cytopoductive surgery
- 11:13 --> 11:15and intraperitoneal chemotherapy.
- 11:15 --> 11:17So it is a very remarkable
- 11:17 --> 11:20effect on these tumors.
- 11:20 --> 11:21On the other hand,
- 11:21 --> 11:22when cancers are more high grade,
- 11:22 --> 11:24so they're more aggressive,
- 11:24 --> 11:26the cure rates are a lot lower.
- 11:26 --> 11:28So it's much harder to reach,
- 11:28 --> 11:29you know, 10 year survivals.
- 11:29 --> 11:31But I think for colon cancer, for instance,
- 11:31 --> 11:33if it's detected very early,
- 11:33 --> 11:35almost 60% of the patients
- 11:35 --> 11:36will live 5 to 10 years,
- 11:36 --> 11:39which I think is a good marker
- 11:39 --> 11:40for considering cure as opposed
- 11:40 --> 11:42to when it's detected late,
- 11:42 --> 11:43you know only 20% of the
- 11:43 --> 11:44patients will live five years.
- 11:44 --> 11:46So I think a lot depends on
- 11:46 --> 11:47when it's detected and then
- 11:47 --> 11:49of course how it is treated.
- 11:49 --> 11:51Also, the other thing that is often
- 11:52 --> 11:54misunderstood or mischaracterized
- 11:54 --> 11:57is HIPEC is not treatment by
- 11:57 --> 11:59itself without considering the
- 11:59 --> 12:01agent itself that's delivered.
- 12:01 --> 12:03It's merely a technology by which
- 12:03 --> 12:05you know therapy is delivered.
- 12:05 --> 12:07So the effects are
- 12:07 --> 12:09dependent on what the intraparitonal
- 12:09 --> 12:11chemotherapy agent is.
- 12:11 --> 12:14The problem with truly understanding
- 12:14 --> 12:17how efficacious or even effective
- 12:17 --> 12:18HIPEC itself
- 12:18 --> 12:21is a little complicated because
- 12:21 --> 12:22the first thing to consider is
- 12:22 --> 12:24is that it is often delivered with
- 12:24 --> 12:26surgery called cytoreductive surgery.
- 12:26 --> 12:27So I give patients the example,
- 12:27 --> 12:29like if you have grease that's
- 12:29 --> 12:31spilt in your room, you know,
- 12:31 --> 12:33instead of just spraying Lysol
- 12:33 --> 12:34on it or Febreze on it,
- 12:34 --> 12:36you first have to clean it all out.
- 12:36 --> 12:38You have to pick up all that grease,
- 12:38 --> 12:40scrub it and then you spray
- 12:40 --> 12:41the Lysol and then scrub it.
- 12:41 --> 12:44So that's really sort of the way HIPEC
- 12:44 --> 12:48works and it's in its core and you
- 12:48 --> 12:50know there are many components to it.
- 12:50 --> 12:51There's heat,
- 12:51 --> 12:52there's flow,
- 12:52 --> 12:54there's the drug that's delivered,
- 12:54 --> 12:56there's the duration that this is given.
- 12:56 --> 12:58And so it's very hard to
- 12:58 --> 12:59experimentally differentiate
- 12:59 --> 13:01which one of these components
- 13:01 --> 13:02is efficacious in which part.
- 13:02 --> 13:06But in randomized trials such as in
- 13:06 --> 13:08ovarian cancer and gastric cancer,
- 13:08 --> 13:11it has clearly been found to be
- 13:11 --> 13:12efficacious when certain agents are given.
- 13:13 --> 13:15But in colon cancer, when oxaliplatin,
- 13:15 --> 13:16one of the agents that's given,
- 13:16 --> 13:17it wasn't effective,
- 13:17 --> 13:18but mitomycin,
- 13:18 --> 13:20another agent was very effective.
- 13:20 --> 13:21So I think it's very individualized
- 13:21 --> 13:23based on the disease.
- 13:24 --> 13:26Fantastic. So we're going to pick up
- 13:26 --> 13:29this conversation right after we take
- 13:29 --> 13:31a short break for a medical minute.
- 13:31 --> 13:33Please stay tuned to learn more about
- 13:33 --> 13:35HIPEC and the treatment of cancer
- 13:35 --> 13:37with my guest doctor Kiran Turaga.
- 13:37 --> 13:39Funding for Yale Cancer Answers
- 13:39 --> 13:42comes from Smilow Cancer Hospital,
- 13:42 --> 13:43where spiritual care offers support
- 13:43 --> 13:45to patients seeking peace in the
- 13:45 --> 13:47midst of their cancer journey,
- 13:47 --> 13:49while respecting the unique philosophies,
- 13:49 --> 13:51spiritualities, and religions
- 13:51 --> 13:53of patients and caregivers.
- 13:53 --> 13:55Smilowcancerhospital.org.
- 13:57 --> 14:00There are over 16.9 million
- 14:00 --> 14:02cancer survivors in the US and
- 14:02 --> 14:04over 240,000 here in Connecticut.
- 14:04 --> 14:06Completing treatment for cancer
- 14:06 --> 14:08is a very exciting milestone,
- 14:08 --> 14:10but cancer and its treatment can
- 14:10 --> 14:12be a life changing experience.
- 14:12 --> 14:14The return to normal activities
- 14:14 --> 14:16and relationships may be difficult
- 14:16 --> 14:18and cancer survivors may face
- 14:18 --> 14:20other long term side effects of
- 14:20 --> 14:22cancer including heart problems,
- 14:22 --> 14:25osteoporosis, fertility issues,
- 14:25 --> 14:28and an increased risk of second cancers.
- 14:28 --> 14:30Resources for cancer survivors are
- 14:30 --> 14:32available at federally designated
- 14:32 --> 14:34Comprehensive Cancer Centers,
- 14:34 --> 14:36such as Yale Cancer Center
- 14:36 --> 14:38and Smilow Cancer Hospital to
- 14:38 --> 14:40keep cancer survivors well and
- 14:40 --> 14:42focused on healthy living.
- 14:42 --> 14:44The Smilow Cancer Hospital Survivorship
- 14:44 --> 14:46Clinic focuses on providing guidance
- 14:46 --> 14:49and direction to empower survivors to
- 14:49 --> 14:51take steps to maximize their health,
- 14:51 --> 14:53quality of life, and longevity.
- 14:53 --> 14:56More information is available
- 14:56 --> 14:57at yalecancercenter.org.
- 14:57 --> 14:59You're listening to Connecticut Public Radio.
- 15:00 --> 15:02Welcome back to Yale Cancer Answers.
- 15:02 --> 15:04This is Doctor Anees Chagpar,
- 15:04 --> 15:06and I'm joined tonight by my guest,
- 15:06 --> 15:07Doctor Kiran Turaga.
- 15:07 --> 15:09We're talking about the evolution of
- 15:09 --> 15:12HIPEC in the treatment of cancer.
- 15:12 --> 15:14And right before the break, Kiran,
- 15:14 --> 15:17you were talking about the fact that
- 15:17 --> 15:20delivering this particular drug
- 15:20 --> 15:25depending on the disease in question,
- 15:25 --> 15:27delivering chemotherapy at a high
- 15:27 --> 15:30temperature into the peritoneal space,
- 15:30 --> 15:33it can potentially be curative
- 15:33 --> 15:35when coupled with surgery for
- 15:35 --> 15:37patients with metastatic disease,
- 15:37 --> 15:39which is something that a lot of
- 15:39 --> 15:41people may not really think about.
- 15:41 --> 15:44When we think about metastatic disease,
- 15:44 --> 15:47the words curative and metastatic
- 15:47 --> 15:49usually don't go together.
- 15:49 --> 15:52So a couple of questions just to wrap up
- 15:52 --> 15:54what we were talking about before
- 15:54 --> 15:57you had mentioned that the peritoneal
- 15:57 --> 16:00cavity is kind of like saran wrap.
- 16:00 --> 16:04And so one can imagine that the
- 16:04 --> 16:08chemotherapy may help to reduce
- 16:08 --> 16:11that amount of disease in people
- 16:11 --> 16:14who have significant burden of
- 16:14 --> 16:17metastases in their abdominal cavity.
- 16:17 --> 16:18The question then becomes,
- 16:18 --> 16:20can you really remove all
- 16:20 --> 16:22of that with surgery?
- 16:22 --> 16:23And if not,
- 16:23 --> 16:26how do you decide what to remove and how
- 16:26 --> 16:29do you decide if that's good enough?
- 16:30 --> 16:32Yeah, they're very, very good questions.
- 16:32 --> 16:35And I think the answer is
- 16:35 --> 16:37a process in evolution.
- 16:37 --> 16:39So the lining which is
- 16:39 --> 16:41on the abdominal wall side,
- 16:41 --> 16:43so essentially in the same
- 16:43 --> 16:45example of the room for instance,
- 16:45 --> 16:47being your abdominal cavity with
- 16:47 --> 16:49furniture inside it,
- 16:49 --> 16:50it's very easy to remove the wallpaper,
- 16:50 --> 16:52the flooring, the roof lining,
- 16:52 --> 16:55which is the the anterior peritoneum
- 16:55 --> 16:56or the parietal peritoneum.
- 16:56 --> 16:58So I think that's a fairly
- 16:58 --> 17:00straightforward procedure and
- 17:00 --> 17:02when I say straightforward you know
- 17:02 --> 17:04developed and you require expertise
- 17:04 --> 17:06but with training I think it's
- 17:06 --> 17:08possible for experts to do.
- 17:08 --> 17:09I think the part where it becomes
- 17:09 --> 17:11a little bit more challenging is
- 17:11 --> 17:13when the peritoneum overlying the
- 17:13 --> 17:16organs called the visceral peritoneum
- 17:16 --> 17:17especially over the intestines
- 17:17 --> 17:19is involved with the disease.
- 17:19 --> 17:23And so I think the key thing
- 17:23 --> 17:26that we know is that
- 17:26 --> 17:29removing tumors part way, halfway,
- 17:29 --> 17:31a little bit, doesn't help.
- 17:31 --> 17:33So I think the key part is in
- 17:33 --> 17:35selecting the patients in whom
- 17:35 --> 17:37we can remove all the disease or
- 17:37 --> 17:40reduce it to a microscopic level
- 17:40 --> 17:42such that the chemotherapy can work.
- 17:42 --> 17:44So I think the selection of patients
- 17:44 --> 17:46is very important and I think the big
- 17:46 --> 17:48factors that actually prevent many of
- 17:48 --> 17:50us from doing these surgeries would
- 17:50 --> 17:53be if there is extensive involvement
- 17:53 --> 17:54of the visceral peritoneum which
- 17:54 --> 17:56is the lining on the intestines
- 17:56 --> 17:58or the surfaces of the intestines
- 17:58 --> 18:00that cannot be feasibly removed.
- 18:00 --> 18:02I think the other thing also
- 18:02 --> 18:03as cancer surgeons, we all
- 18:03 --> 18:05think about very carefully with our
- 18:05 --> 18:07patients and shared decision making is
- 18:07 --> 18:09making sure that we are hitting the goals,
- 18:10 --> 18:12it's not just adequate
- 18:12 --> 18:13to live long or get cured,
- 18:13 --> 18:15if you're going to be living
- 18:15 --> 18:15a miserable life.
- 18:15 --> 18:18So I think it is very important to
- 18:18 --> 18:19balance both quality and quantity of
- 18:19 --> 18:21life when these decisions are being made.
- 18:22 --> 18:24Which of course brings us to
- 18:24 --> 18:26the next question, which is
- 18:26 --> 18:28can you talk about some of the
- 18:28 --> 18:31side effects of this procedure?
- 18:31 --> 18:33Yeah. So I think these side effects are
- 18:33 --> 18:35again broken down into the two components.
- 18:35 --> 18:37So one is the cytoreductive surgery
- 18:37 --> 18:39and these surgeries can be very,
- 18:39 --> 18:42very big where we're doing long operations,
- 18:42 --> 18:448 to 10 hours trying to clean out tumors
- 18:44 --> 18:47from every nook and cranny inside the
- 18:47 --> 18:49abdominal cavity requiring resecting organs,
- 18:49 --> 18:50sometimes many organs.
- 18:50 --> 18:53And so it could be very dramatic
- 18:53 --> 18:54or it could be very minor.
- 18:54 --> 18:55We're actually now doing
- 18:55 --> 18:56these laparoscopically.
- 18:56 --> 18:59In fact we just published along with
- 18:59 --> 19:01a bunch of other institutions a group
- 19:01 --> 19:02of laparoscopic procedures where you
- 19:02 --> 19:05can do these with little poke holes
- 19:05 --> 19:07and remove a lot of the cancers and
- 19:07 --> 19:08still achieve the same benefits.
- 19:08 --> 19:10The premise being you can identify
- 19:10 --> 19:11these cancers early,
- 19:11 --> 19:13which I think is the key to
- 19:13 --> 19:15thinking about the future of this.
- 19:15 --> 19:16And so the side effect profile of
- 19:16 --> 19:18the surgery is something that is
- 19:18 --> 19:20well known and well understood.
- 19:20 --> 19:22The addition of the HIPEC in
- 19:22 --> 19:25many randomized trials adds very
- 19:25 --> 19:27little to the complication profile
- 19:27 --> 19:29when studied in trial.
- 19:29 --> 19:29So essentially,
- 19:29 --> 19:31it can increase the risk of bleeding,
- 19:31 --> 19:32it can increase the risk of
- 19:32 --> 19:34leakages when we make connections.
- 19:34 --> 19:36But I think one of the things that we
- 19:36 --> 19:38notice often in clinics is that it does
- 19:38 --> 19:39knock the wind out of our patients
- 19:39 --> 19:41a little bit more than just surgery.
- 19:41 --> 19:44And so you know patients will typically
- 19:44 --> 19:46feel about 80% of their pre surgery
- 19:46 --> 19:48quality of life at about six weeks
- 19:48 --> 19:49and it takes about 3 months for
- 19:49 --> 19:51people to really start feeling as
- 19:51 --> 19:53well as they did before the surgery.
- 19:53 --> 19:54However,
- 19:54 --> 19:55interestingly in many quality
- 19:55 --> 19:57of life studies at six months,
- 19:57 --> 19:59most patients actually feel better,
- 19:59 --> 20:01like 120% as compared to prior
- 20:01 --> 20:02to surgery obviously because the
- 20:02 --> 20:04cancer has been removed and
- 20:04 --> 20:06they're doing well at that point.
- 20:07 --> 20:09Getting back to the question or
- 20:09 --> 20:12the point that you made earlier
- 20:12 --> 20:14which was that removing
- 20:14 --> 20:17a little bit doesn't really help.
- 20:17 --> 20:20I think a lot of listeners may have the
- 20:20 --> 20:22question that goes something like this.
- 20:22 --> 20:25If you have this peritoneum,
- 20:25 --> 20:27which is a barrier, right?
- 20:27 --> 20:30You had mentioned before the break
- 20:30 --> 20:32that people who have peritoneal
- 20:32 --> 20:35metastases often times don't have a
- 20:35 --> 20:38large burden of circulating cancer
- 20:38 --> 20:42that it really acts to confine that.
- 20:42 --> 20:46So then I wonder if you remove
- 20:46 --> 20:47the peritoneum,
- 20:47 --> 20:49do you then remove that barrier
- 20:49 --> 20:51such that patients who get a
- 20:51 --> 20:54recurrence may be more likely to
- 20:54 --> 20:55get distant metastatic disease?
- 20:56 --> 20:57That's a fascinating question.
- 20:57 --> 20:59And the answer is we
- 20:59 --> 21:00don't know completely,
- 21:00 --> 21:03but I can give you some data that might
- 21:03 --> 21:05help us think about this.
- 21:05 --> 21:07So if you think and again remember
- 21:07 --> 21:08unfortunately there's a very
- 21:08 --> 21:10heterogeneous group of tumors.
- 21:10 --> 21:11So it matters which cancer
- 21:11 --> 21:12we're talking about.
- 21:12 --> 21:14But let's take the example
- 21:14 --> 21:15of colon cancer for instance.
- 21:15 --> 21:17And so in colon cancer,
- 21:17 --> 21:19when the lining is removed,
- 21:19 --> 21:22the peritoneum is removed.
- 21:22 --> 21:25Depending on when the cancer comes back,
- 21:25 --> 21:27often the cancer will still come
- 21:27 --> 21:29back inside the abdominal cavity.
- 21:29 --> 21:30So even though the barrier or
- 21:30 --> 21:32the lining has been removed,
- 21:32 --> 21:34it still tends to come back to the cavity.
- 21:34 --> 21:37Now the caveat is that in colon cancer
- 21:37 --> 21:39we rarely remove the entire lining,
- 21:39 --> 21:40the parietal peritoneum.
- 21:40 --> 21:42And so perhaps there still is
- 21:42 --> 21:44that evidence of a barrier
- 21:44 --> 21:46that's keeping things at bay.
- 21:46 --> 21:47On the other hand,
- 21:47 --> 21:49there are tumors like mesothelioma
- 21:49 --> 21:50appendix tumors where we actually
- 21:50 --> 21:52take out the entire lining.
- 21:52 --> 21:53And even in those scenarios very
- 21:53 --> 21:55often if it does come back,
- 21:55 --> 21:57it still tends to come back
- 21:57 --> 21:58inside the abdominal cavity.
- 21:58 --> 21:59However,
- 21:59 --> 22:01one of the observations we started
- 22:01 --> 22:03noticing as a group most of us
- 22:03 --> 22:04that treat patients with this
- 22:04 --> 22:06disease was that we were now
- 22:06 --> 22:08keeping patients alive longer and
- 22:08 --> 22:10longer to the point where now
- 22:10 --> 22:12we started seeing metastasis or
- 22:12 --> 22:14spread of cancer in locations that
- 22:14 --> 22:15we wouldn't conventionally see.
- 22:15 --> 22:17So for instance in appendix cancer
- 22:17 --> 22:19we started seeing bone metastasis
- 22:19 --> 22:21or brain metastasis five years
- 22:21 --> 22:22after an operation.
- 22:22 --> 22:24So just a very unusual pattern.
- 22:24 --> 22:26So perhaps there may be some
- 22:26 --> 22:28effect of removing the peritoneum,
- 22:28 --> 22:31but not something that is immediately
- 22:31 --> 22:33observable or has been seen by datum.
- 22:34 --> 22:37And you know presumably this will take
- 22:37 --> 22:40longer study because distant metastases
- 22:40 --> 22:43won't occur in the short term.
- 22:43 --> 22:46And so it's interesting to kind of think
- 22:46 --> 22:49about getting these distant metastases
- 22:49 --> 22:52that we may not have seen before.
- 22:52 --> 22:54Which brings us to the
- 22:54 --> 22:56next big question I think,
- 22:56 --> 22:58which is can you talk a little
- 22:58 --> 22:59bit about ongoing research and
- 22:59 --> 23:02things that are most exciting for
- 23:02 --> 23:04you moving forward in this area?
- 23:04 --> 23:06Yeah. So I think
- 23:06 --> 23:08this is perhaps where we have
- 23:08 --> 23:10the opportunity for greatest impact,
- 23:10 --> 23:12which is number one,
- 23:12 --> 23:14I think knowing what this disease is.
- 23:14 --> 23:16So I think finally now there's
- 23:16 --> 23:18enough awareness and there's a lot
- 23:18 --> 23:20of folks that are learning more
- 23:20 --> 23:22about peritoneal metastases early.
- 23:22 --> 23:24And what is fascinating is a study
- 23:24 --> 23:26that was recently published where
- 23:26 --> 23:28patients with colon cancer without
- 23:28 --> 23:30metastases were treated with
- 23:30 --> 23:31intrapertonal chemotherapy with HIPEC
- 23:31 --> 23:34at the time of their operation.
- 23:34 --> 23:35So remember,
- 23:35 --> 23:37no peritoneal metastases and they
- 23:37 --> 23:40actually demonstrated that at three years,
- 23:40 --> 23:4297% of these patients who got the
- 23:42 --> 23:44chemo didn't have peritoneal metastases
- 23:44 --> 23:47versus 84 or 85% of patients in the
- 23:47 --> 23:49other arm who developed metastases.
- 23:49 --> 23:51So it's a remarkable
- 23:52 --> 23:54concept of thinking about can we act
- 23:54 --> 23:56in a preventative way or can we act
- 23:56 --> 23:59in a way where we find these diseases early.
- 23:59 --> 24:02I think the other thing is using
- 24:02 --> 24:03novel technologies like CFDN,
- 24:03 --> 24:05A/C, TDNA, advanced MRI,
- 24:05 --> 24:07advanced PET scans to find these
- 24:07 --> 24:09peritoneal metastases early so
- 24:09 --> 24:11that they can be treated earlier.
- 24:11 --> 24:13And then I think more importantly
- 24:13 --> 24:15finding better agents that can be put
- 24:15 --> 24:17inside the abdomen in better ways.
- 24:17 --> 24:19So there's technologies like HIPEC,
- 24:19 --> 24:22which is aerosolized chemotherapy,
- 24:22 --> 24:24but there's also other things such as
- 24:24 --> 24:26delivering immunotherapy inside the abdomen,
- 24:26 --> 24:29viruses inside the abdomen,
- 24:29 --> 24:31vaccines that I think have really moved
- 24:31 --> 24:33the field forward and are are exciting.
- 24:33 --> 24:36And what I tell a lot
- 24:36 --> 24:38of my patients is that while
- 24:38 --> 24:41we try our best to cure these cancers
- 24:41 --> 24:43and we're not successful all the time,
- 24:44 --> 24:45our goal is to at least keep people
- 24:46 --> 24:47alive long enough with good quality of
- 24:47 --> 24:49life such that our science advances at
- 24:49 --> 24:51a pace that we are able to see this.
- 24:51 --> 24:52And in my own lifetime,
- 24:52 --> 24:55as I'm sure you have seen Anees,
- 24:55 --> 24:57the advances in cancer care have
- 24:57 --> 24:58been dramatic.
- 24:58 --> 25:00You know for the first time we're
- 25:00 --> 25:02seeing reduction in cancer deaths nationally.
- 25:02 --> 25:04We're seeing almost two to
- 25:04 --> 25:07three new drugs being approved by the
- 25:07 --> 25:09FDA every month for many of these conditions.
- 25:09 --> 25:12And so I think it is remarkable to be
- 25:12 --> 25:15at this phase of science where
- 25:15 --> 25:17I feel much more hopeful about our, goals.
- 25:20 --> 25:24Yeah, you know the the idea of
- 25:24 --> 25:27of using HIPEC for preventing
- 25:27 --> 25:30peritoneal metastases is certainly
- 25:30 --> 25:33intriguing especially when you couple
- 25:33 --> 25:37it with this idea of you know the
- 25:37 --> 25:40the peritoneum being a barrier.
- 25:40 --> 25:44So has anybody looked at using just
- 25:44 --> 25:47the chemotherapy part of HIPEC in
- 25:47 --> 25:50terms of the prevention or in the
- 25:50 --> 25:51preventative trial that you mentioned,
- 25:51 --> 25:54were they also removing the
- 25:54 --> 25:55entire parietal peritoneum?
- 25:56 --> 25:59No. So I think 2 parts to the answer.
- 25:59 --> 26:02First for the trial
- 26:02 --> 26:04specifically called the HIPEC T4 trial,
- 26:04 --> 26:06it was removing the colon cancer
- 26:06 --> 26:08and then doing the hot chemo,
- 26:08 --> 26:10not removing the parietal peritoneum.
- 26:10 --> 26:12And so I think that was purely
- 26:12 --> 26:14a study where delivering the
- 26:14 --> 26:15intraparitonal chemotherapy with
- 26:15 --> 26:17mitomycin worked in colon cancer.
- 26:17 --> 26:19A similar study with oxaliplatin
- 26:19 --> 26:20actually didn't work.
- 26:20 --> 26:22So again going to the concept that
- 26:22 --> 26:24the actual drug that is delivered
- 26:24 --> 26:27matters a lot in these diseases.
- 26:28 --> 26:30I think the concept of putting
- 26:30 --> 26:32chemotherapy alone in the abdomen
- 26:32 --> 26:34is something that is being explored
- 26:34 --> 26:36both by a technology or technique
- 26:36 --> 26:39called intraperitoneal aerosol chemotherapy (PIPAC).
- 26:39 --> 26:41In both of these concepts,
- 26:41 --> 26:43if you think of the analogy I'd given
- 26:43 --> 26:45earlier of grease on the floor and
- 26:45 --> 26:46you know cytoreductive surgeries,
- 26:46 --> 26:48removing the grease and HIPEC is sort
- 26:48 --> 26:51of the Lysol or the Febreeze spray.
- 26:51 --> 26:53There is a concept where you actually
- 26:53 --> 26:55don't remove the tumor at all.
- 26:55 --> 26:56So you don't actually scrub
- 26:56 --> 26:58the grease and you just put the
- 26:58 --> 26:59chemotherapy inside the abdomen.
- 26:59 --> 27:00You let it
- 27:00 --> 27:01deliver either through HIPEC
- 27:01 --> 27:04which is heated and delivered inside
- 27:04 --> 27:06the abdomen or through normal
- 27:06 --> 27:07thermic intravertinal chemotherapy.
- 27:07 --> 27:09So you just put a catheter and you
- 27:09 --> 27:11put chemo inside it or with PIPEC
- 27:11 --> 27:13in which you actually aerosolize
- 27:13 --> 27:14the chemotherapy and put it inside.
- 27:14 --> 27:17And there are numerous trials that
- 27:17 --> 27:19are ongoing across the world where
- 27:19 --> 27:22these concepts are being studied not
- 27:22 --> 27:24just to improve quality of life,
- 27:24 --> 27:27but also to see if these are helpful
- 27:27 --> 27:29in controlling the cancers.
- 27:29 --> 27:31It is a little difficult to believe
- 27:31 --> 27:32that these therapies alone,
- 27:32 --> 27:33at least as they stand,
- 27:33 --> 27:35will lead to curative intent.
- 27:35 --> 27:37And so many of these are trials
- 27:37 --> 27:39designed with the end point of
- 27:39 --> 27:41being able to get to cytoreductive
- 27:41 --> 27:43surgery or some other modality.
- 27:43 --> 27:47But it has been very interesting to see many,
- 27:47 --> 27:49many preliminary reports where
- 27:49 --> 27:50intraparitonal chemotherapy delivered
- 27:50 --> 27:54in different forms seems to have
- 27:54 --> 27:55a significant oncological benefit.
- 27:57 --> 27:59And to your earlier point of you
- 27:59 --> 28:02know the whole concept of HIPEC
- 28:02 --> 28:03and cytoreductive surgery being
- 28:03 --> 28:06kind of studied as a bundle, right,
- 28:06 --> 28:09with the heat and the intraparitoneal
- 28:09 --> 28:11chemotherapy and the cytoreductive surgery.
- 28:11 --> 28:13One can only imagine that these trials
- 28:13 --> 28:16that are now ongoing which are looking at,
- 28:16 --> 28:19well what if we don't heat the chemotherapy,
- 28:19 --> 28:22what if we don't do the cytoreductive
- 28:22 --> 28:24surgery might give us some insight into,
- 28:24 --> 28:28you know, which of these elements of HIPEC
- 28:28 --> 28:30are really the most efficacious?
- 28:31 --> 28:31Absolutely.
- 28:32 --> 28:34Doctor Kiran Turaga is a professor and
- 28:34 --> 28:36division Chief of Surgical Oncology
- 28:36 --> 28:39at the Yale School of Medicine.
- 28:39 --> 28:41If you have questions,
- 28:41 --> 28:42the address is canceranswers@yale.edu,
- 28:42 --> 28:45and past editions of the program
- 28:45 --> 28:48are available in audio and written
- 28:48 --> 28:48form at yalecancercenter.org.
- 28:48 --> 28:51We hope you'll join us next week to
- 28:51 --> 28:53learn more about the fight against
- 28:53 --> 28:55cancer here on Connecticut Public Radio.
- 28:55 --> 28:57Funding for Yale Cancer Answers is
- 28:57 --> 29:00provided by Smilow Cancer Hospital.
Information
The Evolution of HIPEC in the Treatment of Cancer with guest Dr. Kiran Turaga
December 24, 2023
ID
11123Guests
Dr. Kiran TuragaTo Cite
DCA Citation Guide