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Adjuvant systemic therapy after resection of node positive gallbladder cancer: Time for a well-designed trial? (Results of a US-national retrospective cohort study).

BACKGROUND: Ideal oncologic management of gallbladder carcinoma (GBCA) after complete surgical resection is unclear. We sought to define benefit of post-resection adjuvant systemic chemotherapy alone in T2 or greater gallbladder carcinoma utilising a large national dataset.

STUDY DESIGN: The National Cancer Data Base (NCDB) 2004-2012 cohort was retrospectively reviewed for patients with GBCA (T2+) undergoing curative-intent resection and surviving at least 6 weeks. Univariate group comparisons, unadjusted Kaplan-Meier and adjusted Cox proportional hazards analyzed overall survival.

RESULTS: 4373 patients were included (N = 2479 T2, N = 1894 T3/4). Overall, 22.1% of patients received adjuvant chemotherapy. Use of multi-agent chemotherapy increased during the study period. Patients receiving adjuvant therapy were younger, had fewer comorbidities, more often node-positive and more likely R1-margins than those receiving surgery alone. Unadjusted overall survival was improved in all patients with node-positive disease as well as for those with inadequate nodal staging. The benefit of chemotherapy persisted after adjustment for patient and tumor factors.

CONCLUSION: Adjuvant systemic chemotherapy is associated with survival benefit in patients with T2 or greater GBCA with node positive disease. We recommend a multidisciplinary approach in these patients as less than 1-in-4 of them currently receive adjuvant chemotherapy. Future clinical trials should address adjuvant chemotherapy in node positive GBCA.

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