| Literature DB >> 26589718 |
Flavius Sandra-Petrescu1, Florian Herrle2, Axel Hinke3, Inga Rossion4, Heiko Suelberg5, Stefan Post6, Ralf-Dieter Hofheinz7, Peter Kienle8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Current evidence supports a diverting stoma in patients undergoing low anterior resection with total mesorectal excision for rectal cancer as it reduces clinical severity of anastomotic leakage. However, relevant stoma morbidity after rectal cancer surgery exists and has a significant impact on quality of life. Moreover, a diverting stoma has an influence on completeness of chemotherapy but it remains unclear in which way. There is no evidence regarding optimal timing for stoma closure in relation to adjuvant chemotherapy. Two randomised controlled trials have studied early stoma closure after low anterior resection in patients with rectal cancer, one of them showing that early closure around day 8 after resection is possible without increasing morbidity. METHODS/Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26589718 PMCID: PMC4654836 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-015-1838-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
|---|---|
| ▪ Temporary diverting stoma (independent from the stoma type) | ▪ ASA >3 |
| ▪ Elective curative LAR with TME (laparoscopic, open or converted) after neoadjuvant therapy (long course chemoradiation or short-term radiotherapy - 5 × 5 Gy) for UICC II-III rectal cancer | ▪ Inflammatory bowel disease |
| ▪ No anastomotic leakage (endoscopic or contrast enema assessment of the anastomosis around day 7 after LAR) | ▪ Contraindication to adjuvant chemotherapy arising after rectal cancer resection [ |
| ▪ Indication to undergo adjuvant chemotherapy (according to current German guidelines the pre-therapeutic stage serves as basis for the adjuvant treatment decision) [ | ▪ Disease progress to UICC IV under neoadjuvant therapy |
| ▪ Patient has given written informed consent | ▪ Immunocompromised patients (HIV-positive, patients currently under chemotherapy for other diseases or patients under immunosuppressive therapy, e.g. Prednisolone >10 mg) |
| ▪ Age ≥18 years | ▪ Participation in another intervention-trial with interference of intervention and outcome of this study |
| ▪ Patient is able to cooperate (ability of subject to understand character and individual consequences of the clinical trial) |
HIV human immunodeficiency virus
Fig. 1Expected patient flow from screening to final analysis. Early closure group: stoma closure and first chemotherapy (CTx) will be done around 2 days and within 4 (earliest) to 12 (latest) weeks respectively after randomisation. Late closure group: first CTx will be done within 4 (earliest) to 12 (latest) weeks after randomisation; stoma closure will be done 4 weeks after end of CTx. Randomisation will be performed around day 7 after LAR (after exclusion of an anastomotic leakage). To reach the statistically calculated goal of 257 recruited patients, at least 128 patients have to be randomised into each trial arm. W: weeks, M: months, OP: operation, *: after randomisation
Dose modification scheme adapted to severity of adverse events
| Grade 2 | Grade 3 | Grade 4 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. occurrence | Withold therapy until AE has resolved to grade 0–1. | Withold therapy until AE has resolved to grade 0–1. | Withold therapy until AE has resolved to grade 0–1. |
| Continue with 100 % of the starting dose. | Continue with 75 % of the starting dose | Continue with 50 % of the starting dose | |
| 2. occurrence | Withold therapy until AE has resolved to grade 0–1. | Withold therapy until AE has resolved to grade 0–1. | Stop treatment. |
| Continue with 75 % of the starting dose. | Continue with 50 % of the starting dose. | ||
| 3. occurrence | Stop treatment | Stop treatment |