| Literature DB >> 26497495 |
J Joshua Smith1, Oliver S Chow2, Marc J Gollub3, Garrett M Nash4, Larissa K Temple5, Martin R Weiser6, José G Guillem7, Philip B Paty8, Karin Avila9, Julio Garcia-Aguilar10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Treatment of patients with non-metastatic, locally advanced rectal cancer (LARC) includes pre-operative chemoradiation, total mesorectal excision (TME) and post-operative adjuvant chemotherapy. This trimodality treatment provides local tumor control in most patients; but almost one-third ultimately die from distant metastasis. Most survivors experience significant impairment in quality of life (QoL), due primarily to removal of the rectum. A current challenge lies in identifying patients who could safely undergo rectal preservation without sacrificing survival benefit and QoL. METHODS/Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26497495 PMCID: PMC4619249 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-015-1632-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Fig. 1Trial schema. MSKCC-based multi-institutional, Phase II trial schema underway to test the feasibility of incorporating a NOM approach to the multimodality treatment of rectal cancer. This study will evaluate the 3-year DFS in LARC patients treated with CRT plus induction or consolidation chemotherapy and TME or NOM (https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02008656?term=NCT02008656&rank=1)
Fig. 2Nonoperative management trial contributors. A map of the United States is shown to demonstrate the multiple institutions involved in this described Phase II trial determining the feasibility of incorporating a NOM approach to the multimodality treatment of LARC patients
Inclusion and exclusion criteria for the trial
| Inclusion Criteria | Exclusion Criteria | |
|---|---|---|
| General | •Histologically confirmed diagnosis of adenocarcinoma of the rectum •Patients must have Stage II (uT3, uN0) or Stage III (T1-3, N1-3) tum or, staged by MRI, that is potentially resectable •Locally advanced rectal cancer a menable to total mesorectal excision •No evidence of distant metastases ·No prior pelvic radiation therapy •No prior chemotherapy or surgery for rectal cancer •Age >18 years •No infections requiring systemic antibiotic treatment •Karnofsky >60% or ECOG 0-2 ·ANC > 1.5 cell/mm3, Hgb>8.0 gm/ dL, PLT>150,000/mm3, total bilirubin < or equal to 1.5 x upper limit of normal, AST > or equal to upper limit of normal, ALT< or equal to three times upper limit of normal | •Recurrent rectal cancer•Primary unresectable rectal cancer is defined as a primary rectal tumor which, on the basis of either physical examination or pelvic MRI, is deemed tobe adherent or fixed to adjacent pelvic structures. (en bloc resection will not achieve negative margins)•Serum creatinine level greater than 1.5 times the upper limit of normal•Patients who have received prior pelvic radiotherapy•Patients with a history of any arterial thrombotic event within the past 6 months, including angina (stable or unstable), MI, or CVA•Patients with any other concurrent medical or psychiatric condition or disease which, in the investigator's judgment, would make them inappropriate candidates for entry into this study•Patients with a history of a prior malignancy within the past 5 years, except for adequately treated basal cell or squamous cell skin cancer, or in situ cervical cancer. •Patients with a history of thrombotic episodes, such as deep venous thrombosis, pulmonary embolus, MI, or CVA occurring more than 6 months prior to enrollment may be considered for protocol participation, provided they are on stable doses of anticoagulant therapy. Patients who are anticoagulated for atrial fibrillation or other conditions may participate, provided they are on stable doses of anticoagulant therapy.• Patients receiving other anticancer or experimental therapy. No other experimental therapies (including chemotherapy, radiation, hormonal treatment, antibody therapy, immunotherapy, gene therapy, vaccine therapy, angiogenesis inhibitors, matrix metalloprotease inhibitors, thalidomide, anti-VEGF/Flk-1 monoclonal antibody, or other experimental drugs) of any kind are permitted while the patient is receiving study treatment. |
| Consent | Patients must read, agree to, and sign a statement of Informed Consent prior to participation in this study. MSKCC patients who do not read or understand English are eligible, but must have the consent form read to them in its entirety by an official translator, either from MSKCC or AT&T. Informed consent for non-literate or non-English speaking patients may not be obtained by using a relative or a member of the patient’s clinical team as a translator. Consortium sites must follow federal, local, and institutional regulations to ensure that non-English speaking patients are consented appropriately. | n/a |
| Women | •Women with childbearing potential who are negative for pregnancy test (urine or blood) and who agree to use effective contraceptive methods. A woman of childbearing potential is defined by one who is biologically capable of becoming pregnant. Reliable contraception should be used from trial screening and must be continued throughout the study. | Women who are pregnant or breastfeeding Women of childbearing potential who are unwilling or unable to use an acceptable method of birth control to avoid pregnancy for the entire study period, and for up to 4 weeks after the study. |
| Men | Male subjects must also agree to use effective contraception. | n/a |
Fig. 3Clinical complete response. Endoscopic and T2-weighted MRI images, both pre- and post-treatment, are shown for a patient who has achieved a clinical complete response. Images displayed were taken from endoscopic and MRI views of an 85 year-old man who underwent capecitabine CRT followed by consolidation chemotherapy with CapeOx and was determined to achieve cCR both clinically and radiologically. In the post-treatment T2-weighted MRI image shown, the green arrow points to the prior site of the tumor
Fig. 4Near-complete response. Endoscopic and T2-weighted MRI images both pre- and post-treatment are shown for a patient who has achieved a near complete response. This is a 74-year-old man who underwent 8 cycles of induction FOLFOX followed by CRT, and achieved a near-cCR. A biopsy obtained in surveillance was determined to contain residual cancer; therefore, the patient was referred for TME
Fig. 5. Incomplete response. Endoscopic and T2-weighted MRI images both pre- and post-treatment are shown for a patient who experienced no significant response to induction chemotherapy followed by CRT. This is a 45-year-old woman who underwent 8 cycles of induction FOLFOX followed by CRT with minimal or no response. The patient was therefore referred for TME
Memorial Sloan Kettering Regression Schema
| Complete Response | Near Complete Response | Incomplete Response | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Endoscopy | Flat, white scar Telangiectasia No ulcer No nodularity | Irregular mucosa Small mucosal nodules or minor mucosal abnormality Superficial ulceration Mild persisting erythema of the scar | Visible tumor |
| Digital Rectal Exam | Normal | Smooth induration or minor mucosal abnormalities | Palpable tumor nodules |
| MRI-T2W | Only dark T2 signal, no intermediate T2 signal | Mostly dark T2 signal, some remaining intermediate signal | More intermediate than dark T2 signal, no T2 scar |
| AND | AND/OR | AND/OR | |
| No visible lymph nodes | Partial regression of lymph nodes | No regression of lymph nodes | |
| MRI-DW | No visible tumor on B800-B1000 signal | Significant regression of signal on B800-B1000 | Insignificant regression of signal on B800-B1000 |
| AND/OR | AND/OR | AND/OR | |
| Lack of or low signal on ADC map Uniform, linear signal in wall above tumor is ok | Minimal or low residual signal on ADC map | Obvious low signal on ADC map |