1. Surgical and local control outcomes after sequential short-course radiation therapy and chemotherapy for rectal cancer
- Author
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I-Chia Liu, MD, Susan Gearhart, MD MEd, Suqi Ke, MS, Chen Hu, PhD MS, Haniee Chung, MD, Jonathan Efron, MD, Alodia Gabre-Kidan, MD MPH, Peter Najjar, MD MBA, Chady Atallah, MD, Bashar Safar, MD, Eric S. Christenson, MD, Nilofer S. Azad, MD, Valerie Lee, MD, Atif Zaheer, MD, Jacqueline E. Birkness-Gartman, MD, Abhinav V. Reddy, MD, Amol K. Narang, MD, and Jeffrey Meyer, MD MS
- Subjects
Rectal cancer ,Radiation therapy ,Proctectomy ,Surgery ,RD1-811 - Abstract
Background: Total neoadjuvant therapy (TNT) is an accepted approach for the management of locally advanced rectal cancer (LARC) and is associated with a decreased risk of development of metastatic disease compared to standard neoadjuvant therapy. However, questions remain regarding surgical outcomes and local control in patients who proceed to surgery, particularly when radiation is given first in the neoadjuvant sequence. We report on our institution's experience with patients who underwent short-course radiation therapy, consolidation chemotherapy, and surgery. Methods: We retrospectively reviewed surgical specimen outcomes, postoperative complications, and local/pelvic control in a large cohort of patients with LARC who underwent neoadjuvant therapy incorporating upfront short-course radiation therapy followed by consolidation chemotherapy. Results: In our cohort of 83 patients who proceeded to surgery, a complete/near-complete mesorectal specimen was achieved in 90 % of patients. This outcome was not associated with the time interval from completion of radiation to surgery. Postoperative complications were acceptably low. Local control at two years was 93.4 % for all patients- 97.6 % for those with low-risk disease and 90.4 % for high-risk disease. Conclusion: Upfront short-course radiation therapy and consolidation chemotherapy is an effective treatment course. Extended interval from completion of short-course radiation therapy did not impact surgical specimen quality.
- Published
- 2024
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