Edward M. Copeland III, MD
The surgeon and the radiation therapist share the
primary responsibility for the maintenance of local control in the management
of carcinoma of the rectum. Usually, radiation therapy is used to control
microscopic disease, while surgery is employed to control macroscopic disease.
For ionizing radiation to be effective, targeted tissues must be well oxygenated.
Likewise, the risk of local recurrence must be great enough to justify
the potential risk of the complications secondary to radiation therapy.
Acceptance of the above-stated axioms dictates that
the combination of radiation therapy and surgery be used to treat carcinoma
of the rectum that has penetrated through the bowel wall into the pericolic
fat and/or when positive lymph nodes are present. Local recurrence rates
are as high as 50% in these circumstances. Quirke and associates1
noted that 27% of patients with cancer of the rectum and rectosigmoid had
metastatic cancer extending to the resected lateral mesenteric margin,
and 85% of these patients had a local recurrence. A positive margin correlated
with advanced Dukes stage and histologic grade, not with type of operation.
Other correlates with local recurrence are perineural invasion, venous
invasion, and bowel perforation (either prior to operation or iatrogenically
at the time of surgery).
To be most effective, radiation therapy should be
given preoperatively rather than postoperatively since cancer cells trapped
in the scar of the healing wound are poorly oxygenated. Likewise, fewer
enteric complications from radiation occur with preoperative radiation
therapy. The small bowel is not trapped in the pelvis by postoperative
adhesions, thereby assuring with postoperative radiation that the same
portion of bowel will receive the radiation dose. In the preoperative situation,
in the absence of pelvic adhesions from a prior operative event, the small
bowel is free to move around in the pelvis so that a different bowel axis
exists from day to day during radiation therapy. In a Swedish multicenter
randomized trial,2 only 12% of patients in the preoperative
radiation therapy group had a local recurrence vs 21% (P<0.02)
in the postoperative radiation therapy group. Morbidity, mortality, and
survival at a mean of six years were the same for both groups.
Reduction in local recurrence from either preoperative
or postoperative radiation therapy is well documented. Three randomized
trials have demonstrated a survival advantage with the use of preoperative
radiation therapy in the treatment of carcinoma of the rectum. Reis-Neto
et al3 administered 40 Gy in four weeks preoperatively and compared
these patients to those undergoing only surgery. The five-year determinant
survival for the radiation group was 76.7% compared with 31.1% for the
surgery-alone group. Isolated local recurrence was 2.9% and 23.5%, respectively.
In the radiation therapy group, three quarters of the patients had tumor
regression greater than 70% of original size. The report of the Northwest
Region Rectal Cancer Group4 in the United Kingdom demonstrated
that patients who received preoperative radiation therapy and a curative
surgical resection had a significantly better survival than the surgery-alone
group. The recently reported randomized trial from the Stockholm Colorectal
Cancer Study Group5,6 also demonstrated a survival advantage
for the patients who received preoperative radiation therapy when compared
with surgery alone.
At the University of Florida, we have used preoperative
radiation therapy for 207 patients with a minimal follow-up of five years.
Each of these patients had either Dukes stage BII or C lesions prior to
radiation therapy. Downstaging resulted in 29% of the patients being BI,
6% being A, and 8% being 0 (no tumor identified in the resected specimen).
The 10-year determinant survival by stage was 87% for stages 0 to A, 64%
for stage B, and 42% for stage C.
More recently, neoadjuvant chemotherapy combined
with radiation therapy has been used preoperatively. It would appear from
published series that the addition of chemotherapy to radiation therapy
has resulted in a higher complete response rate when the surgical specimens
are examined (Table).7-12 Whether this complete response rate
will result in a better survival with the addition of chemotherapy is yet
to be determined. Currently, the regimen used at the University of Florida
is 5-fluorouracil (275 mg/m2 per day) as a continuous infusion
with the peak dose at midnight and the nadir at noon to take advantage
of the circadian rhythm.12 This therapy is combined with at
least 45 Gy in four and one-half weeks. To date, no patient has required
admission to the hospital for complications secondary to the radiation
therapy, theoretically because of circadian rhythm dosing.
|
Effects of the Addition of Chemotherapy
to Preoperative Radiation on Complete Response Rate*
|
| Study Site |
Chemotherapy |
Complete Response |
| |
| University of Florida7 |
None |
8% |
| |
| Washington School of Medicine8 |
None |
6% |
| |
| University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer
Center9 |
5-FU |
29% |
| |
| Duke University Medical Center10 |
5-FU, cisplatin |
27% |
| |
| Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center11 |
5-FU, leucovorin |
20% |
| |
| University of Florida12 |
5-FU |
22% |
| |
| * All patients received 40 to 50 Gy of radiation
therapy. |
With the advent of both transrectal ultrasound and
magnetic resonance imaging, the depth of penetration into the rectal wall
both before and after radiation therapy can be determined. In patients
who have a clinical complete response to radiation therapy, the possibility
of transanal full-thickness excision exists. The group from Jefferson Medical
School13,14 reported a 6% recurrence rate and an overall 89%
five-year survival rate for downstaged, locally excised lesions that have
not invaded through the full thickness of the rectal wall. Likewise, 14
patients who initially had T3 lesions and were downstaged underwent local
excision with no recurrences at five years and with a five-year 88% survival
rate. Whether transanal excision of downstaged lesions will prove to be
a safe and effective means of treatment remains to be determined. Certainly,
morbidity and mortality from transanal local excision are much less than
from either low anterior resection with a stapled or colo-anal anastomosis.
Invasion through the bowel wall into the pericolic
fat and/or the presence of clinically positive lymph nodes in the mesorectum
is the indication for preoperative radiation therapy, possibly combined
with 5-fluorouracil in the neoadjuvant setting. Virtually all circumferential
lesions will invade through the bowel wall, and for noncircumfer-ential
lesions, rectal ultrasound can identify bowel wall penetration. Determining
lymph node status preoperatively is more difficult since enlarged lymph
nodes on pelvic examination by computed tomography, magnetic resonance
imaging, or ultrasonography may be inflammatory rather than neoplastic
in origin. Our tendency has been to err on the side of using radiation
therapy if either bowel wall penetration or positive lymph nodes is suspected.
Virtually all of the lesions shrink in size after neoadjuvant therapy,
and some lesions shrink to the extent that transanal local excision can
be considered. Also, when pelvic dissection is required to remove lesions
transabdominally, radiated lesions shed fewer cancer cells into the lumen
of the bowel. The result is many fewer clusters of malignant cells free
in the bowel lumen to be trapped in the interstices of the anastomotic
staple line, which can cause an increase in staple-line recurrence rates.15
In conclusion, radiation therapy as an adjunct to
the treatment of rectal cancer has evolved from its use postoperatively
as an agent primarily to reduce local recurrence rate to preoperative radiation
therapy in combination with chemotherapy both to provide possible systemic
control of disease and to serve as a local radiation therapy sensitizer.
Recent evidence suggests that the use of neoadjuvant therapy not only decreases
local recurrence rate, but also significantly prolongs survival.
References
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