Litcius/Paper detail

Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy in Locally Advanced Rectal Cancer

Federica Papaccio, Susana Roselló, Marisol Huerta, Valentina Gambardella, Noelia Tarazona, Tania Fleitas, Desamparados Roda, Andrés Cervantes

2020Cancers52 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Most clinical practice guidelines recommend a selective approach for rectal cancer after clinical staging. In low-risk patients, upfront surgery may be an appropriate option. However, in patients with MRI-defined high-risk features such as extramural vascular invasion, multiple nodal involvement or T4 and/or tumors close to or invading the mesorectal fascia, a more intensive preoperative approach is recommended, which may include neoadjuvant or preoperative chemotherapy. The potential benefits include better compliance than postoperative chemotherapy, a higher pathological complete remission rate, which facilitates a non-surgical approach, and earlier treatment of micrometastatic disease with improved disease-free survival compared to standard preoperative chemoradiation or short-course radiation. Two recently reported phase III randomized trials, RAPIDO and PRODIGE 23, show that adding neoadjuvant chemotherapy to either standard short-course radiation or standard long-course chemoradiation in locally advanced rectal cancer patients reduces the risk of metastasis and significantly prolongs disease-related treatment failure and disease-free survival. This review discusses these potentially practice-changing trials and how they may affect our current understanding of treating locally advanced rectal cancers.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineColorectal cancerTotal mesorectal excisionChemotherapyOncologyNeoadjuvant therapyClinical trialRadiation therapyRandomized controlled trialRadiologyDiseaseChemoradiotherapyInternal medicineSurgeryCancerBreast cancerColorectal Cancer Surgical TreatmentsColorectal and Anal CarcinomasGastric Cancer Management and Outcomes