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Management of Locally Advanced Rectal Cancer. Joint Hospital Surgical Grand Round Pamela Youde Nethersole Eastern Hospital Dr. YH Ling 19 May 2007. Colorectal Cancer. Primary modality of treatment: Surgical Resection. Rectal Cancer. Middle and lower rectum Located in the confined pelvis
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Management of Locally Advanced Rectal Cancer Joint Hospital Surgical Grand Round Pamela Youde Nethersole Eastern Hospital Dr. YH Ling 19 May 2007
ColorectalCancer Primary modality of treatment: Surgical Resection
RectalCancer • Middle and lower rectum • Located in the confined pelvis • Close relationship with • urogenital tracts • anal sphincters
Goal of treatment • Achieve oncological cure • Radical resection • Negative distal and circumferential margin
Goal of treatment • Preserve • Urinary function • Sphincter function • Sexual function • Maintain the quality of life
Pelvic organ functions Radical resection
Locally advanced rectal cancer • Tumour and/or regional nodes have invaded the adjacent organs • Bladder, ureters • seminal vesicles, prostate • vagina • sacrum
Pre-op imaging and staging Surgery Chemotherapy Radiotherapy
Better local disease control • Improved overall survival • Greater sphincter preservation rate
Treatment of locally advanced rectal cancer Multidisciplinary cancer management Surgeons Oncologists Diagnostic radiologists
Locally advanced rectal cancer • Pre-op staging • Neoadjuvant chemoradiation therapy
Locally advanced rectal cancer • Tumour and/or regional nodes have invaded the adjacent organs • T3-4 or N+ • 6-10% of rectal cancer
CRM ≤ 2mm distinguishes the TNM stage III patients with high risk of local recurrence (21.4%) from patients with lower risk of local recurrence (12%), p = 0.03
Locally advanced rectal cancer • Tumour growing < 2mm from the mesorectal fascia (fascia proper) • Beyond mesorectal fascia • With major lymph node involvement
Imaging modalities • CT scan • MRI • With or without endorectal coil • Endorectal ultrasound
CT scan • Widely used to stage colorectal cancer • Not good for local staging • Cannot delineate • layers of bowel wall • microinvasion of perirectal fat • Cannot detect • small lymph node metastases (<1cm) • lymph nodes close to the tumour
Endorectal ultrasound (ERUS) • Accuracy • T staging: 83% • N staging: 65-83% • Kim NK, et al. Ann Surg Oncol 2000;7:732–7 • Savides TJ, et al. Endosc2002;56(S4):S12–8.
Endorectal ultrasound (ERUS) • Limitations: • Bowel wall penetration (T): • Inflammatory peritumoral changes mimic deeper invasion Overstage T2 tumour • Nodal status (N): • Difficult to differentiate inflammatory and metastatic nodes • Difficult to detect small or distant lymph nodes
Endorectal ultrasound (ERUS) • Limitations: • Stenotic lesion • Difficult to pass the transducer • Operator dependent • “Sampling error” for large tumour
MRI • Advantage: • Visualize the distance between the tumor and the rectal fascia proper
MRI • Limitation: • Inability to distinguish tumour extension from inflammatory changes • overstage T2 lesions • Brown G, et al.Br J Surg 2003;90:355–64 • Vliegen RFA, et al.Imaging 2003;10–6 • Williamson PR, et al. Dis Colon Rectum 1996;39:45–9 • Fleshman JW, et al. Dis ColonRectum 1992;35:823–9
Preoperative staging of rectal cancerH. Kwok, LP Bissett, GL Hill et alInt J Colorectal Dis (2000) 15:9-20 • Systemic review • 83 studies from 78 papers • 4897 patients
MRI with endorectal coil • Most useful technique for preoperative staging of rectal cancer • Limited availability Limits its routine use • Limited use in stenotic lesions
Potential Advantages • Reduction in tumour size • improve resectability • increase sphincter preservation • Decrease risk of local failure • Improve tumour response in the pre-operative setting
Potential Advantages • Decrease risk of toxicity • Small bowel more readily excluded from the radiation field in preoperative setting • Less bowel dysfunction • Colon used for reconstruction is not in the radiation field • No delay of therapy in patients with operative morbidity
Disadvantage: • Over-treat patient with pre-op overstaged disease
Preoperative staging of rectal cancerH. Kwok, LP Bissett, GL Hill et alInt J Colorectal Dis (2000) 15:9-20
Prospective randomized clinical trials that analyzed neoadjuvant therapy for rectal cancer
n = 415 n = 384 6 weeks
5-year cumulative risk of local failure: • Pre-op chemoradiation group: 6% • Post-op chemoradiation group: 13% • P = 0.006 • Survival: • No difference in two groups
Improved sphincter preservation rates in pre-op chemoradiation therapy group
20% of patients randomized to the post-op chemoradiotherapy group actually have stage I disease on evaluation of resection specimen • These patients will be over-treated if they were treated preoperatively
Chemotherapy with preoperative radiotherapy in rectal cancer N Engl J Med 2006;355(11):1114-23 Bosset JF, Collette L, Calais G, et al Preoperative radiotherapy with or without concurrent fluorouracil and leucovorin in T3-4 rectal cancers: results of FFCD 9203 J ClinOncol 2006;24(28):4620-5 Gerard JP, Conroy T, Bonnetain F, et al
1011 patients with clinical stage T3 or T4 resectable rectal cancer • Randomized to 4 groups:
The cumulative incidences of local recurrences as a first event at 5 years • p=0.002 for the comparison between the group receiving preoperative radiotherapy alone and the other three groups
733 patients with T3-4 Nx M0 rectal cancer • Randomized to 2 groups • Pre-op radiotherapy group • Pre-op chemoradiotherapy group
The 5-year incidence of local recurrence • Pre-op radiotherapy 16.5% • Pre-op chemoradiotherapy 8.1% • p < 0.05 • Overall 5-year survival: • No difference
Neoadjuvant therapy with combined chemoradiation is becoming standard of care in locally advanced rectal cancer
Surgical resection • Resection of the primary tumour • With en bloc resection of adjacent involved structures • Obtain negative margins Neoadjuvant therapy cannot compensate for irradical resection
Conclusions • Locally advanced rectal cancer • TNM staging: T3-T4 or N+ • Circumferential resection margin: • Tumour < 2mm from the mesorectal fascia • Tumour beyond mesorectal fascia • Tumour with major lymph node involvement
Conclusions • MRI with endorectal coil is the best diagnostic tool but not widely available • Endorectal ultrasound (ERUS) is widely used with good accuracy