| Literature DB >> 25611452 |
Emmanouil Fokas1, Torsten Liersch2, Rainer Fietkau3, Werner Hohenberger4, Clemens Hess5, Heinz Becker2, Rolf Sauer3, Christian Wittekind6, Claus Rödel1.
Abstract
Downstaging after neoadjuvant treatment is increasingly used as a prognostic factor and surrogate endpoint in clinical trials. However, in recent trials of neoadjuvant 5-fluorouracil-based chemoradiotherapy for rectal cancer, downstaging did not translate into a benefit with regard to either disease-free survival (DFS) or overall survival. By analyzing the 10-year outcome data of the German CAO/ARO/AIO-94 phase 3 trial, the authors demonstrated that significantly fewer patients had poor prognostic features (eg, ypT3-4, ypN1-2) after preoperative 5-fluorouracil-based chemoradiotherapy. Nevertheless, these patients with International Union for Cancer Control stage II disease were found to be at a higher risk of developing distant metastases and had poorer DFS compared with patients with corresponding TNM tumor (sub)groups in the postoperative treatment arm, whereas patients with International Union for Cancer Control stage III disease demonstrated a nonsignificant trend toward a worse outcome after preoperative treatment. Overall, DFS remained identical in both treatment arms. Thus, "downstage migration" after neoadjuvant treatment resembles the reverse of the Will Rogers phenomenon and therefore may not be a reliable endpoint for long-term outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: chemoradiotherapy; downstage migration; long-term follow-up; phase 3 trial; rectal cancer; reverse Will Rogers phenomenon
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25611452 DOI: 10.1002/cncr.29260
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer ISSN: 0008-543X Impact factor: 6.860