Adjuvant therapy sparing in rectal cancer achieving complete response after chemoradiation

Author

García-Albéniz, Xavier

Gallego, Rosa

Hofhteinz, Ralf Dieter

Fernández Esparrach, Glòria

Ayuso Colella, Juan Ramón

Bombí, Josep Antoni

Conill, Carles

Cuatrecasas Freixas, Miriam

Delgado Rivilla, Salvadora

Ginès i Gibert, M. Àngels

Miquel Morera, Rosa

Pagès Llinàs, M. (Mario)

Pineda, Estela

Pereira, María Verónica

Sosa, Aarón

Reig Torras, Oscar

Victoria, Iván

Feliz, Luis

Lacy Fortuny, Antonio Ma. de

Castells Garangou, Antoni

Burkholder, Iris

Hochhaus, Andreas

Maurel Santasusana, Joan

Publication date

2017-05-25T07:54:10Z

2017-05-25T07:54:10Z

2014-11-14

2017-05-25T07:54:11Z

Abstract

AIM: To evaluate the long-term results of conventional chemoradiotherapy and laparoscopic mesorectal excision in rectal adenocarcinoma patients without adjuvant therapy. METHODS: Patients with biopsy-proven adenocarcinoma of the rectum staged cT3-T4 by endoscopic ultrasound or magnetic resonance imaging received neoadjuvant continuous infusion of 5-fluorouracil for five weeks and concomitant radiotherapy. Laparoscopic surgery was planned after 5-8 wk. Patients diagnosed with ypT0N0 stage cancer were not treated with adjuvant therapy according to the protocol. Patients with ypT1-2N0 or ypT3-4 or N+ were offered 5-fluorouracil-based adjuvant treatment on an individual basis. An external cohort was used as a reference for the findings. RESULTS: One hundred and seventy six patients were treated with induction chemoradiotherapy and 170 underwent total mesorectal excision. Cancer staging of ypT0N0 was achieved in 26/170 (15.3%) patients. After a median follow-up of 58.3 mo, patients with ypT0N0 had five-year disease-free and overall survival rates of 96% (95%CI: 77-99) and 100%, respectively. We provide evidence about the natural history of patients with localized rectal cancer achieving a complete response after preoperative chemoradiation. The inherent good prognosis of these patients will have implications for clinical trial design and care of patients. CONCLUSION: Withholding adjuvant chemotherapy after complete response following standard neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy and laparoscopic mesorectal excision might be safe within an experienced multidisciplinary team.

Document Type

Article
Published version

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Càncer colorectal; Radioteràpia; Quimioteràpia del càncer; Cirurgia laparoscòpica; Estudi de casos; Colorectal cancer; Radiotherapy; Cancer chemotherapy; Laparoscopic surgery; Case studies

Publisher

Baishideng Publishing Group

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.3748/wjg.v20.i42.15820

World Journal of Gastroenterology, 2014, vol. 20, num. 42, p. 15820-15829

https://doi.org/10.3748/wjg.v20.i42.15820

Rights

cc-by-nc (c) García-Albéniz, X. et al., 2014

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/es