Staging

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  • #67204
    2000miler
    Spectator

    Thank you Lainy for the advice on Medicare and PET scans. Maybe my wife’s oncologist has never really pushed to get a PET scan for CC and is only repeating what others have told her. I’ll mention that your husband got approval from Medicare for CC and perhaps she will try. With R0 patient recurrence showing up in the lungs, bones, and like Percy says, FAR away from the original site, I don’t understand how they can find it early without a PET scan or a full-body CT scan.

    Willow – I think you hit it on the head when you wrote “opening her up to clinically see things” in order to ascertain a stage. My wife had undergone a lot of pre-operation tests to determine if the cancer had originated somewhere else, or had metastized somewhere else. Right before the operation the surgeon explained to the family what he was going to do and that included opening her up and exploring, then if everthing was OK, to begin the resection, otherwise he would close her up. We got a call in the waiting room telling us the surgery had started, then a couple of more calls saying everything was going along OK, and then finally, after what seemed like an eternity, a call telling us the resection had started. I believe it was at this time that my wife went from a cT1N1MX to a cT1N1M0, and her stage was established at Stage IVA.

    Bruce

    #67203
    2000miler
    Spectator

    Hi Eli,

    I emailed Dr. Olivier Farges, the lead author for the paper checking the staging in the 7th edition, about the inconsistencies between the paper and the 7th edition. His answer is as follows:

    Mr Baird,

    Thank you for your interest in our paper and your comment.

    This comment is perfectly correct and the explanation is the following.

    Our primary aim was to validate the findings of Nathan et al (“A Proposed Staging System for Intrahepatic Cholangiocarcinoma” published in Ann Surg Oncol 2008) from which the 7th edition was derived.

    In this paper the authors indicate that their proposal for a new staging is the following: “A corresponding ICC stage grouping system was also developed: I – sT1N0M0, II – sT2N0M0, III – sT3N0M0 or N1M0 (any sT), and IV – M1 (any sT, any N).”

    As there were a (confusing) number of staging systems at that time, we have chosen to stick to the proposed stagings.

    We understand that the 7th staging of the AJCC is slightly at variance with Nathan’s proposal but this does not change the message for the following reasons:

    – Stage III in Nathan’s (and our study) includes essentially N1 tumors and very few T3N0 tumors (53 and 4 patients respectively)

    – in our study, survival (in particular the median survival) of patients with T3N0 tumors and Stage III tumors was essentially the same.

    – therefore, Stage III in Nathan’s (and our study) correspond in practice to the stage IVA of the 7th edition.

    We acknowledge that we should have clarified this. However, I also wish to underline that in its current form, there are two weaknesses in the AJCC staging:

    – stage III (T3, N0, M0) is going to be underrepresented as this situation is very rare

    – T4 tumors (Tumor with periductal invasion) is ill-defined, in particular for mass-forming cholangiocarcinoma with an associated periductal-infiltrating growth pattern (which is a frequent situation).

    Do not hesitate to get back to me if your require further information,

    Kind regards,

    Olivier Farges

    Dear Dr. Farges,

    I am a member of the of the Cholangiocarcinoma Foundation ( http://www.cholangiocarcinoma.org/)A comment about a paper, for which you were listed as lead author, was posted on one of our discussion boards. The paper is “AJCC 7th Edition of TNM Staging Accurately Discriminates Outcomes of Patients with Resectable Intrahepatic Cholangiocarcinoma” (http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/cncr.25712/full).

    The comment was that the results presented in the paper, specifically in figures 4 and 2, did not reflect the actual AJCC 7th Edition staging for intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma. For example, in figure 4, N1M0 is identified as stage III and M1 is identified as stage IV, whereas the AJCC 7th edition identifies N1M0 as stage IVA and M1 as stage IVB.

    Is there a reason for the inconsistencies?

    Thank you,

    Bruce Baird

    #67202
    pcl1029
    Member

    Hi, Willow,

    Same to your sister too.

    God bless.

    #67201
    willow
    Spectator

    God Bless You too, Percy.

    #67200
    pcl1029
    Member

    Hi, Lainy,
    That will be music to my ears.
    Thanks Lainy, sometimes when I know too much about this disease,and compound for the fact that I was part of the caregiver team for my sister-in-law and saw the outcome from the beginning to the end of this disease that I have; I get depressed at times; but I know I have already had a good run for 44 months and that has been a gift from God already and I could not ask for more than that. I will report to all of you about the FDA meeting late tomorrow or early the next morning.
    God bless.

    #67199
    lainy
    Spectator

    Percy, didn’t you hear the latest rules? You don’t go from a III to an IV. You go the other way from a III to a II. From my mouth to God’s ears, I can hope right?

    #67198
    pcl1029
    Member

    Hi, Bruce,
    just do like Lainy and try to talk s/he into the PET if you think it will make a difference. . T1N1M0 is much better than T1N1M something.
    In my case ,when the CCA recured and after the 2nd resection; they (both the oncologist and the liver surgeon) told me I am in stage III due to the recurrence.As recent as this month ,even I am clean,my oncologist still gives me the stage III rating. Is that means next time when the CCA recur again and get fixed,I will be in stage IV? I will ask him next time for the answer.
    God bless.

    #67197
    lainy
    Spectator

    Bruce, my husband was in his 70’s and had Medicare. A couple of times he was turned down for PETs but after the ONC intervened and wrote them they always OK’d the PET. I am 72 and have another type of rare Cancer. In the beginning they never turned me down and now I have graduated to CT Scans instead, no problem.
    Best of luck!

    #67196
    2000miler
    Spectator

    Thanks Eli. I’ll try to find an email address for one of the authors and write him about it.

    Percy, I checked with the medical oncologist this morning and she told me that the clinical TNM status was T1N1M0. She said the patholist always uses MX because she does not know (I guess from the specimen) what the M status is.

    Also, I asked the oncologist about alternating PET scans with CT scans. She said that PET scans are not approved for CC or gallbladder cancers, although they are approved for colon cancers. This is probably a Medicare thing.

    Bruce

    #67195
    Eli
    Spectator

    Hi Bruce,

    I’m not sure what’s going on here. It’s not just Figure 4 that looks odd. Look at the bottom chart in Figure 2. The last column (AJCC 7th ed) shows data splits for Stages I, II, III and IV. These stages are clearly at variance with NCCN Guidelines.

    My best guess: AFC-IHCC-2009 Study Group wrote this paper before AJCC 7th Edition was finalized and published. Maybe they worked with a draft 7th edition which was subsequently modified? Just a guess.

    I double-checked the stages in two other sources:

    Source 1:

    Summary of Changes. Understanding the Changes from the Sixth to the Seventh Edition of the AJCC Cancer Staging Manual

    Quote from Page 10:

    Quote:
    Stage IV includes all patients with metastasis, whether nodal or distant, separated into IVA and B to permit identification of each subgroup.
    • Stage IVA now includes node-positive disease (N1).
    • Stage IVB now includes distant metastasis (M1).

    Source 2:

    College of American Pathologists. Protocol for the Examination of Specimens From Patients With Carcinoma of the Intrahepatic Bile Ducts

    Page 11 shows the same stage groupings as NCCN Guidelines.

    #67194
    2000miler
    Spectator

    Eli – The AJCC 7th edition shows the stage for N1 to be either IVA with no distant metastases or IVB with distant metastases. However, the paper “AJCC 7th Edition of TNM Staging Accurately Discriminates Outcomes of Patients with Resectable Intrahepatic Cholangiocarcinoma” by the AFC-IHCC-2009 Study Group, Figure 4, shows lymph node metastases as Stage III. Do you know why?

    http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/cncr.25712/full

    #67193
    marions
    Moderator

    Bruce…I agree in that we need to update the staging information on this site. Eli has offered his help and we will start working on it within the next few days.
    Hugs,
    Marion

    #67192
    pcl1029
    Member

    Hi,
    Honestly ,without Eli and you Bruce,among others,the medical information on this board will not be as vast and accurate as today right now; thanks all for your contribution on the research side. I frequently ask Eli to help me in looking into hard to find information,esp. computer related topics; I talk to Gavin via email for his undying devotion and overall knowledge ,understanding and interest to the members of this board. All of you,with others like Lainy, Karen,Barbara,among others,are indispensable . As you all know,I am a patient and I am a realistic person. and therefore my contribution to this board is limited to what I can do now rather than,like all of you, unlimited in the future.
    Bruce, one thing I want to say about your wife but did not in the previous message.(because,I do not know how well you will response?) is about the “”poorly differentiated” cells comment on then pathology slides.
    The grading for my 1st. resection is “moderately differentiated” and I have 1.2cm clear margin, I have ICCA and was on Gemzar for 14 months,8 months more than it suppose to be;after the adjuvant chemotherapy, 6 months later it came back on a different site FAR away from the original operated site.. so what I am trying to say is be vigilant and keep on researching, the chance of recurrence is no joke.
    God bless.

    #67191
    2000miler
    Spectator

    Thanks Eli for the info that the foundation’s link on staging is out of date. I found that I could download all of the previous AJCC Cancer Staging Manuals from the AJCC website for free. I downloaded the 6th version (2003-2009) and found that it matches the foundation’s info on staging for ICC (pp131-138 of the manual.) I also finally looked at the NCCN Guidelines for ICC (7th ed., 2010) which you mentioned and found the staging that Percy previously stated. It’s interesting that they dropped the MX classification (which the Ochsner pathologist used) so I assume, since they didn’t find any distant metastasis, M0 must apply. If that’s the case, my wife’s stage is Stage IVA.

    At least that’s what it looks like until after I digest Percy’s comments. Percy, I just learned today, after reading the 6th edition of the cancer staging manual that there is both clinical staging and pathologic staging. The surgeon never told us the clinical stage. He did say that it was intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma but because the cancerous lymph node, which was pressing against the common bile duct and causing it to bleed on the inside, I thing he said he was going to perform the surgery more like he would do extrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma surgery. We had conflicting opinions on whether the lymph node had fused to the common bile duct. I believe the surgeon thought it had and the doctor who inserted the stent thought they were separable. The surgeon intially said that he would have to remove all of the right lobe and some of the left lobe, a total of 72%, but after the surgery, he said he didn’t have to remove as much as he initially thought. A couple of weeks after the surgery we met in his office and he gave me a copy of the pathology report and he went throught it with us, emphasizing that it was the best he could have ever expected, specifically addressing the 1 positive node out of 7, and the 2 cm margins. Later the oncologist went through the report with us and the one thing she was concerned with was the “poorly differentiated” histologic grade.

    The pathologist report shows the following:

    SPECIMEN:
    1) Falciform ligament – fibrofatty and vascular tissue. Negative for malignancy
    2) Hepatic Artery Lymph Node – One (1) benign lymph node
    3) Biliary Stent: Gross Diagnosis only
    4) Proximal Bile Duct Margin: Negative for Malignancy
    5) Liver Segments 4B, 5, 7, and 8; Partial Hepatectory: See Synoptic Report:

    Specimen: Liver
    Procedure: partial hepatectomy, major hepatectomy
    Tumor size: 6.4 cm
    Tumor focality: Solitary
    Histologic type: Cholangiocarcinoma
    Histologic grade: Poorly differentiated G3 out of 4
    Tumor growth pattern: Mass forming
    Microscopic tumor extension: Confined to the hepatic parenchyma
    Hepatic parenchymal margin: uninvolved, 2 cm from tumor
    Bile duct margin uninvolved
    No lymphovascular or perineural invasion identified
    pT1 N1 MX
    One (1) hilar lymph node positive for metastatic carcinoma out of 6
    Additionally, hepatic artery lymph node is benign
    Background liver is unremarkable

    Immunostains performed with appropriate positive and negative controls. Tumor cells are positive for keratin 7 and negative for keratin 20, hepatocyte antigen, and estrogen receptor. Findings are consistent with intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma. Tumor surrounds and invades a medium sized branch of the biliary tree. There is marked acute inflammation and necrosis in the tumor.

    I think I included both info from the surgeon and the pathology report in my previous messages on the discussion boards.

    When I said “spread to the liver” I envisioned the cancer starting in a small bile duct contained within the liver and spreading from there to the liver which is in direct contact.

    Thanks for the advice on the PET scan. The surgeon said that their policy is a CT scan every 6 months. Maybe this is a Medicare thing. I’ll ask the oncologist about the PET scan.

    Right now my wife is scheduled to get GemCis for 4 months on a 21 day cycle, the amounts being the same as used in the Phase III study, and radiation with 5FU for 5 weeks, 5 days a week. So, as you suggest, what I’m trying to do is research what we can do to extend the recurrence time. I’ve read a lot of the published studies and I can’t find the answer there, so I’m trying to research the members of this foundation to document their experience. So, far I’ve got about 50 on the spreadsheet, but unfortunately, only 1 of the 50 comes close to my wife’s condition. I thought you might be a candidate because of the Stage IIB you reported. The report I had said Stage IIB for bile duct cancer indicated the cancer had spread to nearby lymph nodes in addition to other factors.

    Percy, thank you for your kind remarks about my contribution to the board. Eli and I are both engineers, and I think it is in our nature to be detailed oriented. I’m 76, retired when I was 57, and most of my career as an electrical engineer was supporting NASA on the Saturn/Apollo “moon” program, the Space Shuttle, and the International Space Station. After the moon landing in 1969, people said, “If we can put men on the moon, then we should be able to _____ (fill in the blank).” Perhaps this should also apply to finding a cure for this horrible disease.

    Bruce

    #67190
    willow
    Spectator

    Thanks for the link and thoughts. I posted on the topic “what’s my label?” To try to figure out what stage my sister is. They didn’t tell her. Perhaps it’s not a true staging without “opening her up” to clinically see things.

Viewing 15 posts - 1 through 15 (of 27 total)
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