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

Peng, J., Lin, J., Qiu, M., Wu, X., Lu, Z., Chen, G., Li, L., Ding, P., Gao, Y., Zeng, Z., Zhang, H., Wan, D., & Pan, Z. (2016). Clinical factors of post-chemoradiotherapy as valuable indicators for pathological complete response in locally advanced rectal cancer . Clinics, 71(8), 449-454. https://doi.org/10.6061/clinics/2016(08)07