Total Neoadjuvant Therapy Followed by Transanal Total Mesorectal Excision for Locally Advanced Rectal Cancer: Early Outcomes, Safety and Feasibility of a Combined Approach

2020 ◽  
Vol 46 (2) ◽  
pp. e10
Author(s):  
Giovanni Taffurelli ◽  
Isacco Montroni ◽  
Paola Tramelli ◽  
Federico Ghignone ◽  
Davide Zattoni ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
David A Kleiman ◽  
Martin R. Weiser

Locally advanced rectal cancer is a complex disease that requires a multidisciplinary treatment team to carefully evaluate each patient before prescribing a treatment plan. The current standard of care in the United States is multimodal therapy, consisting of chemotherapy, radiation, and surgery. Commonly, this involves neoadjuvant long-course chemoradiation, followed by total mesorectal excision and then adjuvant systemic chemotherapy. However, alternative regimens using chemotherapy first, followed by chemoradiation and then surgery (total neoadjuvant therapy), may allow for better tolerance of therapy. Short-course radiation is also acceptable but is rarely used in the United States. Minimally invasive surgical techniques such as laparoscopy, robotic surgery, and transanal total mesorectal excision offer several potential advantages over conventional open surgery, but their oncologic equivalence has not been determined. The role of nonoperative management for locally advanced rectal cancer is still evolving, and additional studies are needed to improve patient selection and evaluate long-term outcomes of a watch-and-wait approach.  This review contains 1 figure, 2 table and 58 references Key words: colorectal cancer, locally advanced rectal cancer, minimally invasive surgery, nonoperative management, radical proctectomy, robotic surgery, total mesorectal excision, total neoadjuvant therapy, transanal total mesorectal excision, watch and wait


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
David A Kleiman ◽  
Martin R. Weiser

Locally advanced rectal cancer is a complex disease that requires a multidisciplinary treatment team to carefully evaluate each patient before prescribing a treatment plan. The current standard of care in the United States is multimodal therapy, consisting of chemotherapy, radiation, and surgery. Commonly, this involves neoadjuvant long-course chemoradiation, followed by total mesorectal excision and then adjuvant systemic chemotherapy. However, alternative regimens using chemotherapy first, followed by chemoradiation and then surgery (total neoadjuvant therapy), may allow for better tolerance of therapy. Short-course radiation is also acceptable but is rarely used in the United States. Minimally invasive surgical techniques such as laparoscopy, robotic surgery, and transanal total mesorectal excision offer several potential advantages over conventional open surgery, but their oncologic equivalence has not been determined. The role of nonoperative management for locally advanced rectal cancer is still evolving, and additional studies are needed to improve patient selection and evaluate long-term outcomes of a watch-and-wait approach.  This review contains 1 figure, 2 table and 58 references Key words: colorectal cancer, locally advanced rectal cancer, minimally invasive surgery, nonoperative management, radical proctectomy, robotic surgery, total mesorectal excision, total neoadjuvant therapy, transanal total mesorectal excision, watch and wait


Author(s):  
Narendra Pandit ◽  
Kunal Bikram Deo ◽  
Sujan Gautam ◽  
Tek Narayan Yadav ◽  
Awaj Kafle ◽  
...  

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