Palliative radiotherapy and chemotherapy instead of surgery in symptomatic rectal cancer with synchronous unresectable metastases: a phase II study
Mené auprès de 40 patients atteints d'un cancer du rectum de stade IV et présentant des métastases distantes synchrones, cet essai de phase II évalue la faisabilité et l'efficacité d'une radiothérapie suivie d'une chimiothérapie à base d'oxaliplatine pour éviter la chirurgie
Background : In stage IV rectal cancer, palliative surgery is often carried out upfront. This study investigated whether the surgery can be avoided. Patients and methods : Forty patients with symptomatic primary rectal adenocarcinoma and synchronous distant metastases deemed to be unresectable received 5 × 5 Gy irradiation and then oxaliplatin-based chemotherapy. Before treatment, 38% of patients had a near-obstructing lesion. The palliative effect was evaluated by questionnaires completed by the patients. Results The median follow-up for living patients was 26 months (range 19–34). The median overall survival was 11.5 months. Eight patients (20%) required surgery during the course of their disease: seven patients required stoma creation and one had local excision. Thirty percent of patients had a complete resolution of pelvic symptoms during the whole course of the disease, and 35% had significant improvement. In the subgroup with a near-obstructing lesion, 23% of patients required stoma creation. In all patients, the probability of requiring palliative surgery at 2 years was 17.5% [95% confidence interval (CI) 13% to 22%), and the probability of sustained good palliative effect after radiotherapy and chemotherapy was 67% (95% CI 58% to 76%). Conclusion Short-course radiotherapy and chemotherapy allowed most patients to avoid surgery, even those with a near-obstructing lesion.ClinicalTrials The trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov: number NCT01157806.