Cargando…

Pelvic local recurrence as first relapse predicts prognosis for clinical stage II/III lower rectal cancer: A clinicopathological investigation

The present study investigated the association between the mode of tumor recurrence and prognosis in 123 patients with clinical stage II/III rectal cancer. In the past 10 years, patients received systemic chemotherapy following radical (R0, with no macroscopic residual tumor lesions) resection using...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Uda, Shuji, Mukai, Masaya, Kishima, Kyoko, Yokoyama, Daiki, Hasegawa, Sayuri, Koike, Takuya, Tajima, Takayuki, Nomura, Eiji, Tomita, Kousuke, Matsumoto, Tomohiro, Hasebe, Terumitsu, Makuuchi, Hiroyasu
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: D.A. Spandidos 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7783710/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33414914
http://dx.doi.org/10.3892/mco.2020.2195
_version_ 1783632164838965248
author Uda, Shuji
Mukai, Masaya
Kishima, Kyoko
Yokoyama, Daiki
Hasegawa, Sayuri
Koike, Takuya
Tajima, Takayuki
Nomura, Eiji
Tomita, Kousuke
Matsumoto, Tomohiro
Hasebe, Terumitsu
Makuuchi, Hiroyasu
author_facet Uda, Shuji
Mukai, Masaya
Kishima, Kyoko
Yokoyama, Daiki
Hasegawa, Sayuri
Koike, Takuya
Tajima, Takayuki
Nomura, Eiji
Tomita, Kousuke
Matsumoto, Tomohiro
Hasebe, Terumitsu
Makuuchi, Hiroyasu
author_sort Uda, Shuji
collection PubMed
description The present study investigated the association between the mode of tumor recurrence and prognosis in 123 patients with clinical stage II/III rectal cancer. In the past 10 years, patients received systemic chemotherapy following radical (R0, with no macroscopic residual tumor lesions) resection using total or tumor-specific mesorectal excision. Patients with rectosigmoid cancer and T4 + chemoradiation therapy were excluded from the present study. The 5-year relapse-free survival rate (5Y-RFS), 5-year overall survival rate (5Y-OS), and associations between early post-operative complications, recurrence mode and prognosis, as well as the 5Y-OS of patients with relapsed cancer, were calculated. The overall 5Y-RFS and 5Y-OS were 71.4 and 83.5%, respectively, and the overall recurrence rate was 22.8% (28/123 patients). Among relapses, remote metastases were observed in 17/123 patients (13.8%): The lung in 8 patients (6.5%), the liver in 5 patients (4.1%) and elsewhere in 4 patients (3.3%). A total of 11 patients (8.9%) had pelvic local recurrence as the first relapse, which was located anterior to the sacrum in 7 patients (5.7%), at the anastomosis site in 2 patients (1.6%), and in the inner pelvis in 2 patients (1.6%). Among relapsed patients, the 5Y-OS was 69.3% in those with distant metastases and 27.3% in those with local relapse (P=0.02; no significant differences in patient demographics). The results indicated that advanced rectal cancer and control of pelvic local recurrence are manageable by R0 resection and postoperative chemotherapy. However, for patients whose initial relapse was pelvic local recurrence, the relapsed tumor initiated a new metastatic cascade to organs, such as the lung and liver, and affected prognosis.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7783710
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher D.A. Spandidos
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-77837102021-01-06 Pelvic local recurrence as first relapse predicts prognosis for clinical stage II/III lower rectal cancer: A clinicopathological investigation Uda, Shuji Mukai, Masaya Kishima, Kyoko Yokoyama, Daiki Hasegawa, Sayuri Koike, Takuya Tajima, Takayuki Nomura, Eiji Tomita, Kousuke Matsumoto, Tomohiro Hasebe, Terumitsu Makuuchi, Hiroyasu Mol Clin Oncol Articles The present study investigated the association between the mode of tumor recurrence and prognosis in 123 patients with clinical stage II/III rectal cancer. In the past 10 years, patients received systemic chemotherapy following radical (R0, with no macroscopic residual tumor lesions) resection using total or tumor-specific mesorectal excision. Patients with rectosigmoid cancer and T4 + chemoradiation therapy were excluded from the present study. The 5-year relapse-free survival rate (5Y-RFS), 5-year overall survival rate (5Y-OS), and associations between early post-operative complications, recurrence mode and prognosis, as well as the 5Y-OS of patients with relapsed cancer, were calculated. The overall 5Y-RFS and 5Y-OS were 71.4 and 83.5%, respectively, and the overall recurrence rate was 22.8% (28/123 patients). Among relapses, remote metastases were observed in 17/123 patients (13.8%): The lung in 8 patients (6.5%), the liver in 5 patients (4.1%) and elsewhere in 4 patients (3.3%). A total of 11 patients (8.9%) had pelvic local recurrence as the first relapse, which was located anterior to the sacrum in 7 patients (5.7%), at the anastomosis site in 2 patients (1.6%), and in the inner pelvis in 2 patients (1.6%). Among relapsed patients, the 5Y-OS was 69.3% in those with distant metastases and 27.3% in those with local relapse (P=0.02; no significant differences in patient demographics). The results indicated that advanced rectal cancer and control of pelvic local recurrence are manageable by R0 resection and postoperative chemotherapy. However, for patients whose initial relapse was pelvic local recurrence, the relapsed tumor initiated a new metastatic cascade to organs, such as the lung and liver, and affected prognosis. D.A. Spandidos 2021-02 2020-12-18 /pmc/articles/PMC7783710/ /pubmed/33414914 http://dx.doi.org/10.3892/mco.2020.2195 Text en Copyright: © Uda et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) , which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non-commercial and no modifications or adaptations are made.
spellingShingle Articles
Uda, Shuji
Mukai, Masaya
Kishima, Kyoko
Yokoyama, Daiki
Hasegawa, Sayuri
Koike, Takuya
Tajima, Takayuki
Nomura, Eiji
Tomita, Kousuke
Matsumoto, Tomohiro
Hasebe, Terumitsu
Makuuchi, Hiroyasu
Pelvic local recurrence as first relapse predicts prognosis for clinical stage II/III lower rectal cancer: A clinicopathological investigation
title Pelvic local recurrence as first relapse predicts prognosis for clinical stage II/III lower rectal cancer: A clinicopathological investigation
title_full Pelvic local recurrence as first relapse predicts prognosis for clinical stage II/III lower rectal cancer: A clinicopathological investigation
title_fullStr Pelvic local recurrence as first relapse predicts prognosis for clinical stage II/III lower rectal cancer: A clinicopathological investigation
title_full_unstemmed Pelvic local recurrence as first relapse predicts prognosis for clinical stage II/III lower rectal cancer: A clinicopathological investigation
title_short Pelvic local recurrence as first relapse predicts prognosis for clinical stage II/III lower rectal cancer: A clinicopathological investigation
title_sort pelvic local recurrence as first relapse predicts prognosis for clinical stage ii/iii lower rectal cancer: a clinicopathological investigation
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7783710/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33414914
http://dx.doi.org/10.3892/mco.2020.2195
work_keys_str_mv AT udashuji pelviclocalrecurrenceasfirstrelapsepredictsprognosisforclinicalstageiiiiilowerrectalcanceraclinicopathologicalinvestigation
AT mukaimasaya pelviclocalrecurrenceasfirstrelapsepredictsprognosisforclinicalstageiiiiilowerrectalcanceraclinicopathologicalinvestigation
AT kishimakyoko pelviclocalrecurrenceasfirstrelapsepredictsprognosisforclinicalstageiiiiilowerrectalcanceraclinicopathologicalinvestigation
AT yokoyamadaiki pelviclocalrecurrenceasfirstrelapsepredictsprognosisforclinicalstageiiiiilowerrectalcanceraclinicopathologicalinvestigation
AT hasegawasayuri pelviclocalrecurrenceasfirstrelapsepredictsprognosisforclinicalstageiiiiilowerrectalcanceraclinicopathologicalinvestigation
AT koiketakuya pelviclocalrecurrenceasfirstrelapsepredictsprognosisforclinicalstageiiiiilowerrectalcanceraclinicopathologicalinvestigation
AT tajimatakayuki pelviclocalrecurrenceasfirstrelapsepredictsprognosisforclinicalstageiiiiilowerrectalcanceraclinicopathologicalinvestigation
AT nomuraeiji pelviclocalrecurrenceasfirstrelapsepredictsprognosisforclinicalstageiiiiilowerrectalcanceraclinicopathologicalinvestigation
AT tomitakousuke pelviclocalrecurrenceasfirstrelapsepredictsprognosisforclinicalstageiiiiilowerrectalcanceraclinicopathologicalinvestigation
AT matsumototomohiro pelviclocalrecurrenceasfirstrelapsepredictsprognosisforclinicalstageiiiiilowerrectalcanceraclinicopathologicalinvestigation
AT hasebeterumitsu pelviclocalrecurrenceasfirstrelapsepredictsprognosisforclinicalstageiiiiilowerrectalcanceraclinicopathologicalinvestigation
AT makuuchihiroyasu pelviclocalrecurrenceasfirstrelapsepredictsprognosisforclinicalstageiiiiilowerrectalcanceraclinicopathologicalinvestigation