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Short-course preoperative radiotherapy combined with chemotherapy,delayed surgery and local hyperthermia for rectal cancer: a phase II study
Authors:A O Rasulov  Yu A Barsukov  S I Tkachev  A G Malikhov  S S Balyasnikova
Institution:1. Department of Oncoproctology, N.N. Blokhin Russian Cancer Research Center, Moscow, Russia;2. Department of Radiational Oncology, N.N. Blokhin Russian Cancer Research Center, Moscow, Russia;3. Department of Radiology, N.N. Blokhin Russian Cancer Research Center, Moscow, Russia;4. Department of Radiology, The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust, Imperial College London, London, UK
Abstract:Purpose: The aim of this study was to investigate the feasibility of short-course radiotherapy with oral capecitabine, hyperthermia and delayed surgery for neoadjuvant treatment of rectal cancer.

Methods: Patients with clinically staged T2-3N0-2M0 primary rectal cancer were included. All patients received short-course 25?Gy in 5?Gy fractions radiotherapy with capecitabine, local hyperthermia and metronidazole. Capecitabine 1000?mg/m2 twice a day was given on days 1–14. Local hyperthermia, 41–45?°C for 60?min, was performed on days 3–5. Metronidazole 10?g/m2 was administered per rectum on days 3 and 5. The time interval to surgery was not less than four weeks after neoadjuvant treatment. The primary end-point was pathological complete response (pCR). Secondary end-points included neoadjuvant treatment toxicity, tumour regression, surgical and oncological outcomes.

Results: A total of 81 patients were included in the analysis. Ten (12.3%) patients had grade 3 toxicity and one (1.2%) patient had grade 4 toxicity. Sphincter-sparing surgery was performed for 78 (96.3%) patients. There was no postoperative mortality. Postoperative complications occurred in 11 (13.8%) patients. Sixteen (20%) patients had a pCR. The median follow-up was 40.9 months. There were no local recurrences. Nine (11.1%) patients developed distant metastases. Three-year overall survival was 97% and the three-year disease-free survival was 85%.

Conclusions: Short-course radiotherapy with chemotherapy, radiosensitizers and delayed surgery is a feasible treatment for rectal cancer and may lead to tumour regression rate comparable with long-course chemoradiation.
Keywords:Rectal cancer  chemoradiotherapy  tumour regression  chemoradiosensitizer  short-course radiotherapy with delayed surgery
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