Advancing Personalized Medicine in the Treatment of Locally Advanced Rectal Cancer.
Francesco Giulio SulloAlessandro PassardiChiara GallioChiara MolinariGiorgia MarisiEleonora PozziLeonardo SolainiAlessandro BittoniPublished in: Journal of clinical medicine (2024)
Rectal cancer presents a significant burden globally, often requiring multimodal therapy for locally advanced cases. Long-course chemoradiotherapy (LCRT) and short-course radiotherapy (SCRT) followed by surgery have been conventional neoadjuvant approaches. Recent trials favor LCRT due to improved local control. However, distant tumor recurrence remains a concern, prompting the exploration of total neoadjuvant therapy (TNT) as a comprehensive treatment strategy. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) show promise, particularly in mismatch repair-deficient (dMMR) or microsatellite instability-high (MSI-H) tumors, potentially revolutionizing neoadjuvant regimens. Nonoperative management (NOM) represents a viable alternative post-neoadjuvant therapy for selected patients achieving complete clinical response (cCR). Additionally, monitoring minimal residual disease (MRD) using circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) emerges as a non-invasive method for the assessment of treatment response. This review synthesizes current evidence on TNT, ICIs, NOM, and ctDNA, elucidating their implications for rectal cancer management and highlighting avenues for future research and clinical application.
Keyphrases
- rectal cancer
- locally advanced
- circulating tumor
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- phase ii study
- squamous cell carcinoma
- cell free
- radiation therapy
- end stage renal disease
- early stage
- newly diagnosed
- minimally invasive
- lymph node
- chronic kidney disease
- immune response
- stem cells
- prognostic factors
- single molecule
- regulatory t cells
- free survival
- atrial fibrillation
- surgical site infection