# Cholangiocarcinoma, sequential chemotherapy, and prognostic tests

**Authors:** Howard W. Bruckner, Robert De Jager, Elisheva Knopf, Fred Bassali, Abe Book, Daniel Gurell, Van Nghiem, Myron Schwartz, Azriel Hirschfeld

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2024.1361420 · Frontiers in Oncology · 2024-06-24

## TL;DR

A clinical trial explores chemotherapy regimens and blood tests to predict survival in cholangiocarcinoma patients.

## Contribution

A new sequential chemotherapy regimen and validated blood-based prognostic tests for cholangiocarcinoma are proposed.

## Key findings

- Patients with favorable blood tests had median survival times exceeding 2 years.
- Sequential chemotherapy regimen showed no severe side effects like hospitalization or severe neuropathies.
- Blood markers like neutrophil-lymphocyte ratio and albumin levels strongly predicted survival outcomes.

## Abstract

Routine blood tests are prognostic tests for patients with cholangiocarcinoma. New drug regimens may produce a median overall survival of 2 years or more.

This single practice, IRB-approved, phase II trial examines prognostic tests, Kaplan-Meier survival, and univariate Cox regression analyses. Eligibility requires: intent-to-treat; signed consent; advanced measurable intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma, with or without resistance to the test drugs; any adult age; performance status 0–2; and expected survival of ≥ 6 weeks. Biweekly treatment, with 1/3 of standard dosages in mg/M2, includes: Gemcitabine 500; 5-Fluorouracil 1200 over 24 hours; Leucovorin 180; Irinotecan 80; and on day 2, Oxaliplatin 40. On progression, drugs are added on day 2: first, Docetaxel 25 precedes Oxaliplatin, with or without Mitomycin C 6 after Oxaliplatin. The next sequential additions are day 1, Cetuximab 400 total mg, then 200 mg weekly, and then Bevacizumab 10 mg/kg is substituted for Cetuximab (FDA IND# 119005).

For 35 patients, 19 with 1–2 lines of prior therapy, resistant tumors, and 16 no prior therapy, survival at 24-months is ≥ 72 and ≥ 58%, respectively. For 14 patients aged ≥ 70 years, ≥ 63% survive 24 months, P = 0.28. Validated tests that predict ≤ 6-month survivals find median survival times of 17-months through > 2-years when compared to patients with favorable tests: Neutrophils lymphocyte ratio > 3.0, HR = 6.54, P < 6.4x10–3; absolute neutrophil count > 8000/μl, HR = 4.95, P < 6.5x10–3; serum albumin < 3.5 g/dl, HR = 4.10, P < 0.03; and lymphocyte monocyte ratio< 2.1, HR = 1.6, P = 0.50. Overall, the 76 (60–90)% of patients with 0–2 out of 4 high risk tests survive ≥ 24 months, (P = 7.1x10–3). Treatments produce neither hospitalization, neutropenic fever, severe enteritis, nor severe neuropathies.

Two-year survival is replicable and predictable. Findings warrant phase III validation tests of sequential regimens, re-challenge with recombination, low dosages, and blood tests that are associated with lethal mechanisms that impair response and survival.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** Gemcitabine (PubChem CID 60750), 5-Fluorouracil (PubChem CID 3385), Leucovorin (PubChem CID 135403648), Irinotecan (PubChem CID 60838), Oxaliplatin (PubChem CID 9887053), Docetaxel (PubChem CID 148124), Mitomycin C (PubChem CID 5746)
- **Diseases:** cholangiocarcinoma (MONDO:0019087)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** neuropathies (MESH:D009422), neutropenic fever (MESH:D005334), Cholangiocarcinoma (MESH:D018281), enteritis (MESH:D004751), tumors (MESH:D009369)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11228241/full.md

## References

56 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11228241/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11228241