Present indications for adjuvant therapy in resectable rectal cancer Journal Article


Author: Minsky, B. D.
Article Title: Present indications for adjuvant therapy in resectable rectal cancer
Abstract: Combined modality therapy is an effective adjuvant therapy for many patients with clinically resectable rectal cancer. The indications for adjuvant therapy for rectal cancer are based on the pattern of failure after surgery. Despite radical surgery, local-regional failure frequently occurs in patients with transmural or node-positive rectal cancers. The incidence of treatment failure in the pelvis is directly correlated with the extent of transmural penetration (microscopic vs gross) and the additional risk of lymph node metastases. In the post-operative setting its use is dictated by pathologic stage and the type of operation (i.e. conventional surgery or a local excision). The choice of which post-operative adjuvant regimen to recommend in the non-protocol setting remains controversial If 5-FU alone is used, then it is best administered by continuous infusion. In the preoperative setting, the use of adjuvant therapy depends on the clinical stage and the need for sphincter preservation. Phase VII trials examining the use of newer chemotherapeutic agents such as Tomudex, UFT/leucovorin, CPT-11, oxaliplatin, eni-luracil and capecitabine with preoperative radiation therapy are in progress. This review examines both the selection criteria and results of adjuvant combined modality therapy for patients with clinically resectable rectal cancer. © 2001 GEM s.r.l.
Keywords: treatment outcome; review; multimodality cancer therapy; patient selection; postoperative care; preoperative care; combined modality therapy; methodology; radiotherapy; surgery; abdominal surgery; drug therapy; rectal neoplasms; rectum tumor; digestive system surgical procedures; adjuvant; humans; human
Journal Title: Annali Italiani di Chirurgia
Volume: 72
Issue: 5
ISSN: 0003-469X
Publisher: Edizioni Luigi Pozzi  
Date Published: 2001-10-01
Start Page: 519
End Page: 526
Language: English
PUBMED: 11975405
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: Export Date: 21 May 2015 -- Source: Scopus
Citation Impact
MSK Authors
  1. Bruce Minsky
    306 Minsky
Related MSK Work