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Management of Locally Advanced Rectal Cancer

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

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  1. Management of Locally Advanced Rectal Cancer Joint Hospital Surgical Grand Round Pamela Youde Nethersole Eastern Hospital Dr. YH Ling 19 May 2007

  2. ColorectalCancer Primary modality of treatment: Surgical Resection

  3. RectalCancer • Middle and lower rectum • Located in the confined pelvis • Close relationship with • urogenital tracts • anal sphincters

  4. Goal of treatment • Achieve oncological cure • Radical resection • Negative distal and circumferential margin

  5. Goal of treatment • Preserve • Urinary function • Sphincter function • Sexual function • Maintain the quality of life

  6. Pelvic organ functions Radical resection

  7. Locally advanced rectal cancer • Tumour and/or regional nodes have invaded the adjacent organs • Bladder, ureters • seminal vesicles, prostate • vagina • sacrum

  8. Pre-op imaging and staging Surgery Chemotherapy Radiotherapy

  9. Better local disease control • Improved overall survival • Greater sphincter preservation rate

  10. Treatment of locally advanced rectal cancer Multidisciplinary cancer management Surgeons Oncologists Diagnostic radiologists

  11. Locally advanced rectal cancer • Pre-op staging • Neoadjuvant chemoradiation therapy

  12. Locally advanced rectal cancer

  13. Locally advanced rectal cancer • Tumour and/or regional nodes have invaded the adjacent organs • T3-4 or N+ • 6-10% of rectal cancer

  14. 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

  15. Locally advanced rectal cancer • Tumour growing < 2mm from the mesorectal fascia (fascia proper) • Beyond mesorectal fascia • With major lymph node involvement

  16. Pre-operative staging

  17. Imaging modalities • CT scan • MRI • With or without endorectal coil • Endorectal ultrasound

  18. 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

  19. 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.

  20. 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

  21. Endorectal ultrasound (ERUS) • Limitations: • Stenotic lesion • Difficult to pass the transducer • Operator dependent • “Sampling error” for large tumour

  22. MRI • Advantage: • Visualize the distance between the tumor and the rectal fascia proper

  23. 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

  24. 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

  25. MRI with endorectal coil • Most useful technique for preoperative staging of rectal cancer • Limited availability Limits its routine use • Limited use in stenotic lesions

  26. Neoadjuvant chemoradiation therapy

  27. Potential Advantages • Reduction in tumour size • improve resectability • increase sphincter preservation • Decrease risk of local failure • Improve tumour response in the pre-operative setting

  28. 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

  29. Disadvantage: • Over-treat patient with pre-op overstaged disease

  30. Preoperative staging of rectal cancerH. Kwok, LP Bissett, GL Hill et alInt J Colorectal Dis (2000) 15:9-20

  31. Prospective randomized clinical trials that analyzed neoadjuvant therapy for rectal cancer

  32. n = 415 n = 384 6 weeks

  33. 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

  34. Improved sphincter preservation rates in pre-op chemoradiation therapy group

  35. 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

  36. 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

  37. 1011 patients with clinical stage T3 or T4 resectable rectal cancer • Randomized to 4 groups:

  38. 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

  39. 733 patients with T3-4 Nx M0 rectal cancer • Randomized to 2 groups • Pre-op radiotherapy group • Pre-op chemoradiotherapy group

  40. 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

  41. Neoadjuvant therapy with combined chemoradiation is becoming standard of care in locally advanced rectal cancer

  42. 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

  43. 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

  44. Conclusions • MRI with endorectal coil is the best diagnostic tool but not widely available • Endorectal ultrasound (ERUS) is widely used with good accuracy

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