Accuracy of radiological staging in identifying high‐risk colon cancer patients suitable for neoadjuvant chemotherapy: a multicentre experience |
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Authors: | S. Dighe I. Swift L. Magill K. Handley R. Gray P. Quirke D. Morton M. Seymour B. Warren G. Brown |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Surgery, Mayday University Hospital, Croydon, Surrey, UK;2. Birmingham Clinical Trials Unit, School of Cancer Sciences, Birmingham, UK;3. Leeds Institute of Molecular Medicine, Leeds, UK;4. Academic Department of Surgery, University Hospital Birmingham, Birmingham, UK;5. St James University Hospital, Leeds, UK;6. Department of Pathology, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, UK;7. Department of Radiology, Royal Marsden Hospital, Sutton, Surrey, UK |
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Abstract: | Aim A pilot study was undertaken to determine the accuracy of computed tomography (CT) staging in identifying patients with high‐risk colon cancers who would be considered as candidates for a neoadjuvant therapy trial (FOxTROT) and those at low risk (T1/T2) who would be excluded. Method Participating radiologists from 19 centres attended workshops for standardization of image interpretation according to previously defined prognostic criteria: good prognosis tumours, including, T1/T2; intermediate prognosis, T3 < 5 mm tumour invasion beyond the muscularis propria (MP); and poor prognosis tumours, including T3 with tumour extension ≥ 5 mm beyond the MP or T4. The CT findings were compared with histopathology as the reference standard. Results Of 94 patients with radiological and pathological data, 71% were categorized by CT as having a poor prognosis. The sensitivity and specificity of CT in identifying these tumours were 87% (95% CI, 74–94) and 49% (95% CI, 33–65). Sensitivity and specificity for tumour infiltration beyond the MP (T3/T4 vs T1/T2) were 95% (95% CI, 87–98) and 50% (95% CI, 22–77), respectively. Including all CT‐staged T3 and T4 patients in the trial would have increased the proportion eligible for entry to 89% (n = 84) without affecting the false‐positive rate of 7%. Some 20% of T3/T4 patients would have been ineligible for FOxTROT because of synchronous metastases. Conclusion In a multicentre setting, CT scanning identified high‐risk (T3/4) colon cancers with minimal overstaging of T1/T2 tumours, thus establishing the feasibility of radiologically guided neoadjuvant chemotherapy. |
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Keywords: | CT colon cancer neoadjuvant chemotherapy |
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