scholarly journals Reply letter to: “Lymph node harvest in rectal cancer patients with good tumor regression grade following neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy"

2019 ◽  
Vol 64 ◽  
pp. 57-58
Author(s):  
Leonardo Bustamante-Lopez ◽  
Caio S. Nahas ◽  
Sergio C. Nahas
2021 ◽  
Vol 100 (2) ◽  

Introduction: The article contains a summary of the issues of staging and therapy with an emphasis on the neoadjuvant treatment and associated tumor regression grade with the analysis of our own group of patients. Methods: Retrospective analysis of patients with rectal cancer who underwent a surgery at the 1st Department of Surgery – Thoratic, Abdominal and Injury Surgery; First Faculty of Medicine, Charles University in Prague and General University Hospital in Prague, Czech Republic, focusing on those who underwent neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy and their pathologists evaluated tumor regression grade after the resection. Results: The group consists of 161 patients operated on between 2012 and 2016. 47 patients underwent neoadjuvant oncological treatment with further evaluation of the tumor regression grade by a pathologist, a scoring system according to Ryan was used. A complete pathological response was elicited in 10.4% of patients, no response in 35.4% of patients, and partial tumor regression in 54.2%. Conclusion: Although there is a difference in our results compared to foreign publications, the proportion of patients remains comparable. Studies evaluating the advantages versus disadvantages of neoadjuvant therapy will certainly follow, and the question of the suitability of surgical treatment as the only curative solution is partially raised.


2019 ◽  
Vol 37 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. 3569-3569 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiaolin Zhou ◽  
Guole Lin ◽  
Yuhua Gong ◽  
Yanyan Zhang ◽  
Yan-Fang Guan ◽  
...  

3569 Background: Neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy (nCRT) is nowadays the standard of care for the locally advanced rectal cancer (LARC). However, there is no effective method to predict patients’ possible benefits from nCRT and monitor the response to it. Methods: Patients with locally advanced middle and low rectal cancer of stage cT3-4N0M0 or cTanyN+M0 were enrolled from August 2017 to July 2018. All patients received nCRT with long-term radiation plus fluorouracil based chemotherapy, followed by the radical surgery. Serial plasma samples were collected pre-nCRT, during nCRT, and preoperatively (8 weeks after the completion of nCRT). Somatic mutations were detected with next-generation sequencing using a 1021-gene panel with peripheral blood lymphocyte DNA as a germline control. Results: This prospective cohort study enrolled 61 patients with rectal cancer. The pathological complete response (pCR) rate and the downstage rate was 31% (19/61) and 80% (49/61), respectively. ctDNA was detectable in 77% (47/61), 18% (11/61) and 13% (8/61) of blood samples obtained pre-nCRT, during nCRT and preoperatively, respectively. No significant association was observed between pre-nCRT ctDNA status with any clinicopathological factors, including age, gender, differentiation or tumor circumferential extent. Among the 8 patients with detectable ctDNA preoperatively, pathological tumor regression grade (TRG) of CAP 2-3 were observed and hepatic metastasis was found in 4 patients within 2 months. For patients with undetectable pre-operative ctDNA, a higher proportion archived pathological downstaging (85% vs 50%). The correlation between preoperative ctDNA status and achievement of pathological downstage was independent of age, gender or differentiation (p = 0.02). In addition, preoperative ctDNA positivity was associated with the persistently involved lymph node (p = 0.02). However, neither pre-nCRT nor during-nCRT ctDNA status was associated with pathological downstaging or persistently lymph node involvement. Conclusions: Detectable ctDNA after the completion of nCRT is a predicator of unsatisfactory curative effect of patients with LARC, which might indicate novel treatment intensification studies. Clinical trial information: NCT03042000.


2018 ◽  
Vol 109 (6) ◽  
pp. 2046-2055 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tomohiro Kadota ◽  
Ken Hatogai ◽  
Tomonori Yano ◽  
Takeo Fujita ◽  
Takashi Kojima ◽  
...  

Diagnostics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (11) ◽  
pp. 2132
Author(s):  
Wan-Shan Li ◽  
Chih-I Chen ◽  
Hsin-Pao Chen ◽  
Kuang-Wen Liu ◽  
Chia-Jen Tsai ◽  
...  

Data mining of a public transcriptomic rectal cancer dataset (GSE35452) from the Gene Expression Omnibus, National Center for Biotechnology Information identified the melanophilin (MLPH) gene as the most significant intracellular protein transport-related gene (GO:0006886) associated with a poor response to preoperative chemoradiation. An MLPH immunostain was performed on biopsy specimens from 172 rectal cancer patients receiving preoperative chemoradiation; samples were divided into high- and low-expression groups by H-scores. Subsequently, the correlations between MLPH expression and clinicopathologic features, tumor regression grade, disease-specific survival (DSS), local recurrence-free survival (LRFS), and metastasis-free survival (MeFS) were analyzed. MLPH expression was significantly associated with CEA level (p = 0.001), pre-treatment tumor status (p = 0.022), post-treatment tumor status (p < 0.001), post-treatment nodal status (p < 0.001), vascular invasion (p = 0.028), and tumor regression grade (p < 0.001). After uni- and multi-variable analysis of five-year survival, MLPH expression was still associated with lower DSS (hazard ratio (HR), 10.110; 95% confidence interval (CI), 2.178–46.920; p = 0.003) and MeFS (HR, 5.621; 95% CI, 1.762–17.931; p = 0.004). In conclusion, identifying MLPH expression could help to predict the response to chemoradiation and survival, and aid in personal therapeutic modification.


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