4.6 Review

The oligometastatic spectrum in the era of improved detection and modern systemic therapy

Journal

NATURE REVIEWS CLINICAL ONCOLOGY
Volume 19, Issue 9, Pages 585-599

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41571-022-00655-9

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Funding

  1. Virginia and D. K. Ludwig Fund for Cancer Research
  2. Foglia Family Foundation

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This review reframes the oligometastatic phenotype as a dynamic state that can be improved with locally ablative, metastasis-directed therapy. The authors highlight important risk factors defining the metastatic spectrum and provide strategies for integrating local therapies with modern systemic treatments.
The oligometastatic state is generally considered to constitute an intermediate point along the spectrum of cancer dissemination at which the metastatic burden is limited and local ablative therapies can result in meaningful clinical benefit, and possibly even cure. In this Review, Katipally et al. reframe the oligometastatic phenotype as a dynamic state that expands beyond merely the number or size of metastases. They highlight important risk factors defining the metastatic spectrum that can inform both staging and therapy, and identify themes in the literature that might guide strategies to optimally combine metastasis-directed local therapies with modern systemic treatments. Metastases remain the leading cause of cancer-related mortality. The oligometastasis hypothesis postulates that a spectrum of metastatic spread exists and that some patients with a limited burden of metastases can be cured with ablative therapy. Over the past decade, substantial advances in systemic therapies have resulted in considerable improvements in the outcomes of patients with metastatic cancers, warranting re-examination of the oligometastatic paradigm and the role of local ablative therapies within the context of the improved therapeutic responses, shifting patterns of disease recurrence and possible synergy with systemic treatments. Herein, we reframe the oligometastatic phenotype as a dynamic state for which locally ablative, metastasis-directed therapy improves clinical outcomes, including by prolonging survival and increasing cure rates. Important risk factors defining the metastatic spectrum are highlighted that inform both staging and therapy. Finally, we synthesize the literature on combining local therapies with modern systemic treatments, identifying general themes to optimally integrate ablative therapies in this context.

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