Recently several hundred doctors and scientist from all over the world
with an interesting in mesothelioma met in Boston to discuss, among other
things, the role of
surgery in treating meso patients (the "IMIG" group).
Earlier, a paper had been published out of the UK that questioned the merits of
extrapleural pneumonectomy
(EPP) as compared to
chemotherapy alone (the trial didn't offer
pleurectomy/decortication). The IMIG group pointed out various flaws in the design
and operation of the trial. In particular, the clinical trial, the first
of its kind anywhere, had terrible trouble over a period of three years
recruiting the 50 patients it needed for a pilot trial. The
MARS group's plan was to follow up the pilot study with a full blown and
statistical meaningful mega-trial of 670 patients. They never got there.
Of the 50 meso patients they did recruit, many of those did not complete
the arm of the study they started (ie. surgery only or chemo only), or
they crossed over (from surgery to chemo, or vice versa) during the trial.
The MARS authors to their credit did acknowledge this deal-breaker problem.
They went so far as to question whether a clincial trial of this kind
was ever feasible at all in the real world, where patients simply don't
want to be "guniea pigs" even in the greater interests of medical
advancement. A clinical trial of this scope has never even been attempted
in the US.
In the US, patients have many choices, and it remains "muddy"
what the best option is across the board for the "average" meso
patient. Dr. Cameron and Dr. Sugarbaker have publically disagreed over
which surgery is "better" - ie. EPP vs
Pleurectomy/Decortication. However, both agree today that the role of surgery is to remove as much
tumor as you can see (what Dr. Sugarbaker has coined "complete macroscopic
resection" (MCR)). Dr. Cameron has been a long time advocate of pulling
up his sleeves and pulling out a much tumor as he can see, without watching
the clock, noting that "negative margins" was and always will
be a pipedream for a meso surgeon.
I encourage you to read the draft proposal submitted by Dr. Cameron, which
is based on an earlier draft proposed by Dr. Sugarbaker. Although there
are stylistic differences, both agree that surgery should be performed
along with adjuvant care to attack the unseen tumor cells that remain
in the body after surgery.
As Dr. Cameron tactfully writes: "The exact surgical procedure should
be based on disease distribution, surgeon preference and experience, and
institutional experience and should be performed with a morbidity and
mortality consistent with published literature."
As a patient, before making your decision (e.g., chemo only? What chemo?
Surgery? What operation? By whom and where?), the IMIG Group has also
recommended that you follow these important guidelines:
-
Pathological
diagnosis including histologic subtype should be established by
tissue biopsy.
-
Clinical
staging be performed prior to initiation of therapy and should include PET with
lymph node sampling and/or MRI as indicated.
- The type of surgery (EPP, P/D, etc) should be based on clinical factors
as well as individual surgical judgment and expertise.
- Complete surgical stating should include hilar and mediastinal lymph node removal.
The IMIG board will review all comments and submit the final approved version
for publication in a suitable journal with collective authorship. Doctors
as well as patients need and deserve this kind of up-to-date education.
We applaud Dr. Cameron and Dr. Sugarbaker, as well as all the other doctors,
who have participated in this project.