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Preoperative bi-fractionated accelerated radiation therapy for combined treatment of locally advanced rectal cancer in a consectutive series of unselected patients

BACKGROUND: although preoperative RT (Radiation Therapy) is becoming the preferred approach for combined treatment of locally advanced rectal adenocarcinoma, no regimen can be now considered as a standard. Since the toxicity of preoperative RT isn't yet completely known, and the advantages of p...

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Autores principales: Biffi, Roberto, Marsiglia, Hugo, Fossa, Barbara Jereczek, Leonardi, Maria Cristina, Cante, Domenico, Lazzari, Roberta, Chiappa, Antonio, Cenciarelli, Sabine, Andreoni, Bruno, Zampino, Maria Giulia, Orecchia, Roberto
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central|1 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2063497/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17883838
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1477-7800-4-23
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author Biffi, Roberto
Marsiglia, Hugo
Fossa, Barbara Jereczek
Leonardi, Maria Cristina
Cante, Domenico
Lazzari, Roberta
Chiappa, Antonio
Cenciarelli, Sabine
Andreoni, Bruno
Zampino, Maria Giulia
Orecchia, Roberto
author_facet Biffi, Roberto
Marsiglia, Hugo
Fossa, Barbara Jereczek
Leonardi, Maria Cristina
Cante, Domenico
Lazzari, Roberta
Chiappa, Antonio
Cenciarelli, Sabine
Andreoni, Bruno
Zampino, Maria Giulia
Orecchia, Roberto
author_sort Biffi, Roberto
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: although preoperative RT (Radiation Therapy) is becoming the preferred approach for combined treatment of locally advanced rectal adenocarcinoma, no regimen can be now considered as a standard. Since the toxicity of preoperative RT isn't yet completely known, and the advantages of preoperative RT could be counterbalanced by increased postoperative morbidity and mortality, a monocentre series of preoperative bifractionated accelerated RT was retrospectively reviewed to clarify toxicity and outcomes after a prolonged follow up. METHODS: patients were screened following these eligibility criteria: histology-proven adenocarcinoma of the rectum; distal tumour extent at 12 cm or less from the anal verge; clinical stage T3–4/anyN, or anyT/N1–2; ECOG Performance Status 0–2. A total dose of 41.6 Gy (26 twice daily fractions of 1.6 Gy) was delivered. Surgery was carried out 17 ± 2 days after RT completion, adopting the total mesorectal excision technique. RESULTS: 24 men and 23 women were enrolled; median age was 55 years (r.: 39–77). Twenty-eight patients were stage II and 19 stage III. 9 patients suffered from a recurrent tumour. 2 patients experienced a severe grade 4 gastrointestinal toxicity (a colo-vaginal fistula and an intestinal obstruction, both successfully treated). Operative mortality was nil; postoperative early complications occurred in 13 cases; mean length of hospital stay was 15 days. After a mean follow up of 44 months (r.: 18–84) 8 patients had deceased for recurrent disease, 15 were alive with a disease progression (2 pelvic recurrences and 13 pure distant deposits) and 24 were alive, without disease. The 5-year actuarial overall survival was 74.2%, the disease-free survival 62.9% and the regional control rate 84.7%. Long-term complications included 1 case of radiation enteritis requiring surgery, 2 cases of anastomotic stricture and 3 cases of bladder incontinence. CONCLUSION: bifractionated accelerated RT administered in the preoperative setting to patients bearing locally advanced rectal cancer is reliable and safe, as its immediate and late toxicity (mainly infectious) is acceptably low and long-term survivals are achievable. These findings support the increasing use of preoperative RT for treatment of this malignancy in experienced centres. Ongoing multicentric trials are expected to address still unsolved issues, including the benefit of CT adjunct to preoperative RT.
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spelling pubmed-20634972007-11-06 Preoperative bi-fractionated accelerated radiation therapy for combined treatment of locally advanced rectal cancer in a consectutive series of unselected patients Biffi, Roberto Marsiglia, Hugo Fossa, Barbara Jereczek Leonardi, Maria Cristina Cante, Domenico Lazzari, Roberta Chiappa, Antonio Cenciarelli, Sabine Andreoni, Bruno Zampino, Maria Giulia Orecchia, Roberto Int Semin Surg Oncol Review BACKGROUND: although preoperative RT (Radiation Therapy) is becoming the preferred approach for combined treatment of locally advanced rectal adenocarcinoma, no regimen can be now considered as a standard. Since the toxicity of preoperative RT isn't yet completely known, and the advantages of preoperative RT could be counterbalanced by increased postoperative morbidity and mortality, a monocentre series of preoperative bifractionated accelerated RT was retrospectively reviewed to clarify toxicity and outcomes after a prolonged follow up. METHODS: patients were screened following these eligibility criteria: histology-proven adenocarcinoma of the rectum; distal tumour extent at 12 cm or less from the anal verge; clinical stage T3–4/anyN, or anyT/N1–2; ECOG Performance Status 0–2. A total dose of 41.6 Gy (26 twice daily fractions of 1.6 Gy) was delivered. Surgery was carried out 17 ± 2 days after RT completion, adopting the total mesorectal excision technique. RESULTS: 24 men and 23 women were enrolled; median age was 55 years (r.: 39–77). Twenty-eight patients were stage II and 19 stage III. 9 patients suffered from a recurrent tumour. 2 patients experienced a severe grade 4 gastrointestinal toxicity (a colo-vaginal fistula and an intestinal obstruction, both successfully treated). Operative mortality was nil; postoperative early complications occurred in 13 cases; mean length of hospital stay was 15 days. After a mean follow up of 44 months (r.: 18–84) 8 patients had deceased for recurrent disease, 15 were alive with a disease progression (2 pelvic recurrences and 13 pure distant deposits) and 24 were alive, without disease. The 5-year actuarial overall survival was 74.2%, the disease-free survival 62.9% and the regional control rate 84.7%. Long-term complications included 1 case of radiation enteritis requiring surgery, 2 cases of anastomotic stricture and 3 cases of bladder incontinence. CONCLUSION: bifractionated accelerated RT administered in the preoperative setting to patients bearing locally advanced rectal cancer is reliable and safe, as its immediate and late toxicity (mainly infectious) is acceptably low and long-term survivals are achievable. These findings support the increasing use of preoperative RT for treatment of this malignancy in experienced centres. Ongoing multicentric trials are expected to address still unsolved issues, including the benefit of CT adjunct to preoperative RT. BioMed Central|1 2007-09-20 /pmc/articles/PMC2063497/ /pubmed/17883838 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1477-7800-4-23 Text en Copyright © 2007 Biffi et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Review
Biffi, Roberto
Marsiglia, Hugo
Fossa, Barbara Jereczek
Leonardi, Maria Cristina
Cante, Domenico
Lazzari, Roberta
Chiappa, Antonio
Cenciarelli, Sabine
Andreoni, Bruno
Zampino, Maria Giulia
Orecchia, Roberto
Preoperative bi-fractionated accelerated radiation therapy for combined treatment of locally advanced rectal cancer in a consectutive series of unselected patients
title Preoperative bi-fractionated accelerated radiation therapy for combined treatment of locally advanced rectal cancer in a consectutive series of unselected patients
title_full Preoperative bi-fractionated accelerated radiation therapy for combined treatment of locally advanced rectal cancer in a consectutive series of unselected patients
title_fullStr Preoperative bi-fractionated accelerated radiation therapy for combined treatment of locally advanced rectal cancer in a consectutive series of unselected patients
title_full_unstemmed Preoperative bi-fractionated accelerated radiation therapy for combined treatment of locally advanced rectal cancer in a consectutive series of unselected patients
title_short Preoperative bi-fractionated accelerated radiation therapy for combined treatment of locally advanced rectal cancer in a consectutive series of unselected patients
title_sort preoperative bi-fractionated accelerated radiation therapy for combined treatment of locally advanced rectal cancer in a consectutive series of unselected patients
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2063497/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17883838
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1477-7800-4-23
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