University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, CO
Tyler Friedrich , Karyn A. Goodman , Stephen Leong , Whitney Herter , Sarah Lindsey Davis , Jon Vogel , Ana Gleisner , Cheryl Lauren Meguid , William T. Purcell , Martin McCarter , Michelle Cowan , Tracey E. Schefter , Wells A. Messersmith , Christopher Hanyoung Lieu
Background: The current standard treatment for locally advanced rectal cancer (LARC) is neoadjuvant chemoradiation followed by surgery, and then adjuvant chemotherapy. An alternative approach currently being offered to patients at University of Colorado is total neoadjuvant therapy (TNT), in which patients receive all of their planned treatment, including systemic chemotherapy, preoperatively. Methods: Records of patients from the University of Colorado multidisciplinary colorectal clinic between 2/2015 and 5/2017 were retrospectively reviewed. Treatment plans for included patients involved 8 cycles of preoperative chemotherapy with FOLFOX (5-fluoruracil, oxaliplatin, leucovorin), followed by chemoradiation with concurrent capecitabine, and then resection. Patient data collected includes demographic information, initial staging, chemotherapy and radiation received, adverse effects, surgical outcomes, and clinical and pathological response to treatment. Results: At the time of our analysis, 14 patients have completed TNT and undergone surgical resection, with either abdominoperineal resection or low anterior resection (LAR), at the University of Colorado. Patients ranged in age from 39 to 74 years (mean age 56) with 8 patients (57%) female sex. All 14 patients received 5-fluorouracil with all 8 cycles, though 4 (29%) required omission of oxaliplatin by cycle 8. Toxicities from preoperative treatment were as expected, without significant delays in surgery. Of the 14 patients, 4 (29%) showed a pathologic complete response (grade 0, no residual tumor) on their surgical pathology, with 8 (57%) having either grade 0 or 1 (minimal residual tumor) response. Of the 5 patients who underwent LAR with diverting loop ileostomies, mean time to ostomy reversal was 53.6 days (range 49-61). No patients developed clinically-apparent metastatic disease during preoperative therapy. Conclusions: The use of preoperative chemotherapy in addition to standard chemoradiation for locally advanced rectal cancer is well-tolerated, results in a high rate of pathologic complete response, and allows for early reversal of diverting ileostomies.
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