Multimodal rectal cancer treatment: In some cases, less may be more Journal Article


Authors: Garcia-Aguilar, J.; Glynne-Jones, R.; Schrag, D.
Article Title: Multimodal rectal cancer treatment: In some cases, less may be more
Abstract: A series of clinical trials in the last several decades has resulted in the development of multimodality treatment of locally advanced rectal cancer that includes neoadjuvant (preoperative) chemoradiotherapy, total mesorectal excision, and postoperative adjuvant chemoradiotherapy. Owing to this regimen, patients with locally advanced rectal cancer have better survival rates than patients with colon cancer, but at the cost of substantial morbidity and reduced quality of life. The challenge is to identify treatment approaches that maintain or even improve oncologic outcomes while preserving quality of life. We have identified different tumor characteristics that are associated with recurrence and probability of survival for locally advanced rectal cancer. This risk stratification, based on baseline clinical staging and tumor response to chemoradiotherapy, has led us to question whether all patients with locally advanced rectal cancer require every component of the multimodal regimen. In this article, we will review recent evidence that some patients with locally advanced rectal cancer can be spared one or more treatment modalities without compromising long-term oncologic outcomes and while preserving quality of life.
Keywords: treatment outcome; disease-free survival; multimodality cancer therapy; clinical trials as topic; disease free survival; combined modality therapy; neoadjuvant therapy; cancer staging; neoplasm staging; quality of life; rectal neoplasms; clinical trial (topic); procedures; adjuvant chemoradiotherapy; chemoradiotherapy, adjuvant; humans; human
Journal Title: American Society of Clinical Oncology Educational Book
Volume: 36
ISSN: 1548-8756
Publisher: American Society of Clinical Oncology  
Date Published: 2016-05-01
Start Page: 92
End Page: 102
Language: English
DOI: 10.14694/EDBK_159221
PUBMED: 27249690
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: Review -- Export Date: 2 March 2017 -- Source: Scopus
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