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Current Approaches and Challenges for Monitoring Treatment Response in Colon and Rectal Cancer

Introduction: With the advent of multidisciplinary and multimodality approaches to the management of colorectal cancer patients, there is an increasing need to define how we monitor response to novel therapies in these patients. Several factors ranging from the type of therapy used to the intrinsic...

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Autores principales: McKeown, Elizabeth, Nelson, Daniel W., Johnson, Eric K., Maykel, Justin A., Stojadinovic, Alexander, Nissan, Aviram, Avital, Itzhak, Brücher, Björn LDM, Steele, Scott R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Ivyspring International Publisher 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3881219/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24396496
http://dx.doi.org/10.7150/jca.7987
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author McKeown, Elizabeth
Nelson, Daniel W.
Johnson, Eric K.
Maykel, Justin A.
Stojadinovic, Alexander
Nissan, Aviram
Avital, Itzhak
Brücher, Björn LDM
Steele, Scott R.
author_facet McKeown, Elizabeth
Nelson, Daniel W.
Johnson, Eric K.
Maykel, Justin A.
Stojadinovic, Alexander
Nissan, Aviram
Avital, Itzhak
Brücher, Björn LDM
Steele, Scott R.
author_sort McKeown, Elizabeth
collection PubMed
description Introduction: With the advent of multidisciplinary and multimodality approaches to the management of colorectal cancer patients, there is an increasing need to define how we monitor response to novel therapies in these patients. Several factors ranging from the type of therapy used to the intrinsic biology of the tumor play a role in tumor response. All of these can aid in determining the ideal course of treatment, and may fluctuate over time, pending down-staging or progression of disease. Therefore, monitoring how disease responds to therapy requires standardization in order to ultimately optimize patient outcomes. Unfortunately, how best to do this remains a topic of debate among oncologists, pathologists, and colorectal surgeons. There may not be one single best approach. The goal of the present article is to shed some light on current approaches and challenges to monitoring treatment response for colorectal cancer. Methods: A literature search was conducted utilizing PubMed and the OVID library. Key-word combinations included colorectal cancer metastases, neoadjuvant therapy, rectal cancer, imaging modalities, CEA, down-staging, tumor response, and biomarkers. Directed searches of the embedded references from the primary articles were also performed in selected circumstances. Results: Pathologic examination of the post-treatment surgical specimen is the gold standard for monitoring response to therapy. Endoscopy is useful for evaluating local recurrence, but not in assessing tumor response outside of the limited information gained by direct examination of intra-lumenal lesions. Imaging is used to monitor tumors throughout the body for response, with CT, PET, and MRI employed in different circumstances. Overall, each has been validated in the monitoring of patients with colorectal cancer and residual tumors. Conclusion: Although there is no imaging or serum test to precisely correlate with a tumor's response to chemo- or radiation therapy, these modalities, when used in combination, can aid in allowing clinicians to adjust medical therapy, pursue operative intervention, or (in select cases) identify complete responders. Improvements are needed, however, as advances across multiple modalities could allow appropriate selection of patients for a close surveillance regimen in the absence of operative intervention.
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spelling pubmed-38812192014-01-06 Current Approaches and Challenges for Monitoring Treatment Response in Colon and Rectal Cancer McKeown, Elizabeth Nelson, Daniel W. Johnson, Eric K. Maykel, Justin A. Stojadinovic, Alexander Nissan, Aviram Avital, Itzhak Brücher, Björn LDM Steele, Scott R. J Cancer Review Introduction: With the advent of multidisciplinary and multimodality approaches to the management of colorectal cancer patients, there is an increasing need to define how we monitor response to novel therapies in these patients. Several factors ranging from the type of therapy used to the intrinsic biology of the tumor play a role in tumor response. All of these can aid in determining the ideal course of treatment, and may fluctuate over time, pending down-staging or progression of disease. Therefore, monitoring how disease responds to therapy requires standardization in order to ultimately optimize patient outcomes. Unfortunately, how best to do this remains a topic of debate among oncologists, pathologists, and colorectal surgeons. There may not be one single best approach. The goal of the present article is to shed some light on current approaches and challenges to monitoring treatment response for colorectal cancer. Methods: A literature search was conducted utilizing PubMed and the OVID library. Key-word combinations included colorectal cancer metastases, neoadjuvant therapy, rectal cancer, imaging modalities, CEA, down-staging, tumor response, and biomarkers. Directed searches of the embedded references from the primary articles were also performed in selected circumstances. Results: Pathologic examination of the post-treatment surgical specimen is the gold standard for monitoring response to therapy. Endoscopy is useful for evaluating local recurrence, but not in assessing tumor response outside of the limited information gained by direct examination of intra-lumenal lesions. Imaging is used to monitor tumors throughout the body for response, with CT, PET, and MRI employed in different circumstances. Overall, each has been validated in the monitoring of patients with colorectal cancer and residual tumors. Conclusion: Although there is no imaging or serum test to precisely correlate with a tumor's response to chemo- or radiation therapy, these modalities, when used in combination, can aid in allowing clinicians to adjust medical therapy, pursue operative intervention, or (in select cases) identify complete responders. Improvements are needed, however, as advances across multiple modalities could allow appropriate selection of patients for a close surveillance regimen in the absence of operative intervention. Ivyspring International Publisher 2014-01-01 /pmc/articles/PMC3881219/ /pubmed/24396496 http://dx.doi.org/10.7150/jca.7987 Text en © Ivyspring International Publisher. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/). Reproduction is permitted for personal, noncommercial use, provided that the article is in whole, unmodified, and properly cited.
spellingShingle Review
McKeown, Elizabeth
Nelson, Daniel W.
Johnson, Eric K.
Maykel, Justin A.
Stojadinovic, Alexander
Nissan, Aviram
Avital, Itzhak
Brücher, Björn LDM
Steele, Scott R.
Current Approaches and Challenges for Monitoring Treatment Response in Colon and Rectal Cancer
title Current Approaches and Challenges for Monitoring Treatment Response in Colon and Rectal Cancer
title_full Current Approaches and Challenges for Monitoring Treatment Response in Colon and Rectal Cancer
title_fullStr Current Approaches and Challenges for Monitoring Treatment Response in Colon and Rectal Cancer
title_full_unstemmed Current Approaches and Challenges for Monitoring Treatment Response in Colon and Rectal Cancer
title_short Current Approaches and Challenges for Monitoring Treatment Response in Colon and Rectal Cancer
title_sort current approaches and challenges for monitoring treatment response in colon and rectal cancer
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3881219/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24396496
http://dx.doi.org/10.7150/jca.7987
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