Clinical factors of post-chemoradiotherapy as valuable indicators for pathological complete response in locally advanced rectal cancer

Authors

  • Jianhong Peng Sun Yat-sen University; Department of Colorectal Surgery
  • Junzhong Lin Sun Yat-sen University; Department of Colorectal Surgery
  • Miaozhen Qiu Sun Yat-sen University; Department of Medical Oncology
  • Xiaojun Wu Sun Yat-sen University; Department of Colorectal Surgery
  • Zhenhai Lu Sun Yat-sen University; Department of Colorectal Surgery
  • Gong Chen Sun Yat-sen University; Department of Colorectal Surgery
  • Liren Li Sun Yat-sen University; Department of Colorectal Surgery
  • Peirong Ding Sun Yat-sen University; Department of Colorectal Surgery
  • Yuanhong Gao Sun Yat-sen University; Department of Radiation Onology
  • Zhifan Zeng Sun Yat-sen University; Department of Radiation Onology
  • Huizhong Zhang Sun Yat-sen University; Department of Pathology
  • Desen Wan Sun Yat-sen University; Department of Colorectal Surgery
  • Zhizhong Pan Sun Yat-sen University; Department of Colorectal Surgery

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.6061/clinics/2016(08)07

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Pathological complete response has shown a better prognosis for patients with locally advanced rectal cancer after preoperative chemoradiotherapy. However, correlations between post-chemoradiotherapy clinical factors and pathologic complete response are not well confirmed. The aim of the current study was to identify post-chemoradiotherapy clinical factors that could serve as indicators of pathologic complete response in locally advanced rectal cancer. METHODS: This study retrospectively analyzed 544 consecutive patients with locally advanced rectal cancer treated at Sun Yat-sen University Cancer Center from December 2003 to June 2014. All patients received preoperative chemoradiotherapy followed by surgery. Univariate and multivariate regression analyses were performed to identify post-chemoradiotherapy clinical factors that are significant indicators of pathologic complete response. RESULTS: In this study, 126 of 544 patients (23.2%) achieved pathological complete response. In multivariate analyses, increased pathological complete response rate was significantly associated with the following factors: post-chemoradiotherapy clinical T stage 0-2 (odds ratio=2.098, 95% confidence interval=1.023-4.304, p=0.043), post-chemoradiotherapy clinical N stage 0 (odds ratio=2.011, 95% confidence interval=1.264-3.201, p=0.003), interval from completion of preoperative chemoradiotherapy to surgery of >;7 weeks (odds ratio=1.795, 95% confidence interval=1.151-2.801, p=0.010) and post-chemoradiotherapy carcinoembryonic antigen ≤2 ng/ml (odds ratio=1.579, 95% confidence interval=1.026-2.432, p=0.038). CONCLUSIONS: Post-chemoradiotherapy clinical T stage 0-2, post-chemoradiotherapy clinical N stage 0, interval from completion of chemoradiotherapy to surgery of >;7 weeks and post-chemoradiotherapy carcinoembryonic antigen ≤2 ng/ml were independent clinical indicators for pathological complete response. These findings demonstrate that post-chemoradiotherapy clinical factors could be valuable for post-operative assessment of pathological complete response.

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Published

2016-08-01

Issue

Section

Clinical Sciences

How to Cite

Clinical factors of post-chemoradiotherapy as valuable indicators for pathological complete response in locally advanced rectal cancer . (2016). Clinics, 71(8), 449-454. https://doi.org/10.6061/clinics/2016(08)07