» Articles » PMID: 29611518

3 Versus 6 Months of Adjuvant Oxaliplatin-fluoropyrimidine Combination Therapy for Colorectal Cancer (SCOT): an International, Randomised, Phase 3, Non-inferiority Trial

Abstract

Background: 6 months of oxaliplatin-containing chemotherapy is usually given as adjuvant treatment for stage 3 colorectal cancer. We investigated whether 3 months of oxaliplatin-containing chemotherapy would be non-inferior to the usual 6 months of treatment.

Methods: The SCOT study was an international, randomised, phase 3, non-inferiority trial done at 244 centres. Patients aged 18 years or older with high-risk stage II and stage III colorectal cancer underwent central randomisation with minimisation for centre, choice of regimen, sex, disease site, N stage, T stage, and the starting dose of capecitabine. Patients were assigned (1:1) to receive 3 months or 6 months of adjuvant oxaliplatin-containing chemotherapy. The chemotherapy regimens could consist of CAPOX (capecitabine and oxaliplatin) or FOLFOX (bolus and infused fluorouracil with oxaliplatin). The regimen was selected before randomisation in accordance with choices of the patient and treating physician. The primary study endpoint was disease-free survival and the non-inferiority margin was a hazard ratio of 1·13. The primary analysis was done in the intention-to-treat population and safety was assessed in patients who started study treatment. This trial is registered with ISRCTN, number ISRCTN59757862, and follow-up is continuing.

Findings: 6088 patients underwent randomisation between March 27, 2008, and Nov 29, 2013. The intended treatment was FOLFOX in 1981 patients and CAPOX in 4107 patients. 3044 patients were assigned to 3 month group and 3044 were assigned to 6 month group. Nine patients in the 3 month group and 14 patients in the 6 month group did not consent for their data to be used, leaving 3035 patients in the 3 month group and 3030 patients in the 6 month group for the intention-to-treat analyses. At the cutoff date for analysis, there had been 1482 disease-free survival events, with 740 in the 3 month group and 742 in the 6 month group. 3 year disease-free survival was 76·7% (95% CI 75·1-78·2) for the 3 month group and 77·1% (75·6-78·6) for the 6 month group, giving a hazard ratio of 1·006 (0·909-1·114, test for non-inferiority p=0·012), significantly below the non-inferiority margin. Peripheral neuropathy of grade 2 or worse was more common in the 6 month group (237 [58%] of 409 patients for the subset with safety data) than in the 3 month group (103 [25%] of 420) and was long-lasting and associated with worse quality of life. 1098 serious adverse events were reported (492 reports in the 3 month group and 606 reports in the 6 month group) and 32 treatment-related deaths occurred (16 in each group).

Interpretation: In the whole study population, 3 months of oxaliplatin-containing adjuvant chemotherapy was non-inferior to 6 months of the same therapy for patients with high-risk stage II and stage III colorectal cancer and was associated with reduced toxicity and improved quality of life. Despite the fact the study was underpowered, these data suggest that a shorter duration leads to similar survival outcomes with better quality of life and thus might represent a new standard of care.

Funding: Medical Research Council, Swedish Cancer Society, NETSCC, and Cancer Research UK.

Citing Articles

Assessing the clinical utility of tumor invasion proportion of lymph nodes for enhanced risk stratification in N1 colorectal cancer.

Chen R, Xu D, Fan X, Qiao Y, Jiang X, Hao J Am J Cancer Res. 2025; 14(12):5826-5838.

PMID: 39803664 PMC: 11711517. DOI: 10.62347/DFXC4525.


Single-cell AI-based detection and prognostic and predictive value of DNA mismatch repair deficiency in colorectal cancer.

Nowak M, Jabbar F, Rodewald A, Gneo L, Tomasevic T, Harkin A Cell Rep Med. 2024; 5(9):101727.

PMID: 39293403 PMC: 11525017. DOI: 10.1016/j.xcrm.2024.101727.


Validity of Patient-Reported Outcome Measures in Evaluating Nerve Damage Following Chemotherapy.

Li T, Timmins H, Mahfouz F, Trinh T, Mizrahi D, Horvath L JAMA Netw Open. 2024; 7(8):e2424139.

PMID: 39120903 PMC: 11316238. DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.24139.


The Glasgow Microenvironment Score: an exemplar of contemporary biomarker evolution in colorectal cancer.

Knight K, Bigley C, Pennel K, Hay J, Maka N, McMillan D J Pathol Clin Res. 2024; 10(4):e12385.

PMID: 38853386 PMC: 11163018. DOI: 10.1002/2056-4538.12385.


Prognostic and Predictive Value of Immunoscore in Stage III Colorectal Cancer: Pooled Analysis of Cases From the SCOT and IDEA-HORG Studies.

Domingo E, Kelly C, Hay J, Sansom O, Maka N, Oien K J Clin Oncol. 2024; 42(18):2207-2218.

PMID: 38484206 PMC: 11185918. DOI: 10.1200/JCO.23.01648.


References
1.
Grothey A, Sobrero A, Shields A, Yoshino T, Paul J, Taieb J . Duration of Adjuvant Chemotherapy for Stage III Colon Cancer. N Engl J Med. 2018; 378(13):1177-1188. PMC: 6426127. DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa1713709. View

2.
Chau I, Norman A, Cunningham D, Tait D, Ross P, Iveson T . A randomised comparison between 6 months of bolus fluorouracil/leucovorin and 12 weeks of protracted venous infusion fluorouracil as adjuvant treatment in colorectal cancer. Ann Oncol. 2005; 16(4):549-57. DOI: 10.1093/annonc/mdi116. View

3.
Pachman D, Qin R, Seisler D, Smith E, Beutler A, Ta L . Clinical Course of Oxaliplatin-Induced Neuropathy: Results From the Randomized Phase III Trial N08CB (Alliance). J Clin Oncol. 2015; 33(30):3416-22. PMC: 4606060. DOI: 10.1200/JCO.2014.58.8533. View

4.
Hooper R . The Bayesian interpretation of a P-value depends only weakly on statistical power in realistic situations. J Clin Epidemiol. 2009; 62(12):1242-7. DOI: 10.1016/j.jclinepi.2009.02.004. View

5.
Andre T, Iveson T, Labianca R, Meyerhardt J, Souglakos I, Yoshino T . The IDEA (International Duration Evaluation of Adjuvant Chemotherapy) Collaboration: Prospective Combined Analysis of Phase III Trials Investigating Duration of Adjuvant Therapy with the FOLFOX (FOLFOX4 or Modified FOLFOX6) or XELOX (3 versus.... Curr Colorectal Cancer Rep. 2013; 9:261-269. PMC: 3766516. DOI: 10.1007/s11888-013-0181-6. View