The Role of Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy in Locally Advanced Colon Cancer.
Amy BodyHans PrenenSarah LathamMarissa LamSamuel SmithAjay RaghunathEva SegelovPublished in: Cancer management and research (2021)
Neoadjuvant systemic therapy has many potential advantages over up-front surgery, including tumor downstaging, early treatment of micrometastatic disease, and providing an in vivo test of tumor biology. Due to these advantages, neoadjuvant therapy is becoming the standard of care for an increasing number of tumor types. Currently, colon cancer patients are still routinely treated with up-front surgery, and neoadjuvant systemic therapy is not yet standard. Limitations to widespread use of neoadjuvant therapy have included inaccurate radiological staging, concerns about tumor progression while undergoing preoperative treatment rendering a patient incurable, and a lack of randomized data demonstrating benefit. However, there is great interest in neoadjuvant chemotherapy, and a number of trials are under way. Early follow up of the first phase III trial of neoadjuvant chemotherapy for colon cancer demonstrated tumor downstaging and suggested an improvement in disease-free survival with neoadjuvant chemotherapy, and it is hoped that this will translate into longer-term overall survival benefit. Clinicians should closely watch this developing field, consider the option of neoadjuvant chemotherapy for colon cancer patients, and actively seek out opportunities for their patients to participate in ongoing clinical trials to further inform this field in future.
Keyphrases
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- locally advanced
- rectal cancer
- lymph node
- phase iii
- squamous cell carcinoma
- clinical trial
- phase ii study
- radiation therapy
- sentinel lymph node
- open label
- free survival
- palliative care
- end stage renal disease
- double blind
- minimally invasive
- chronic kidney disease
- randomized controlled trial
- newly diagnosed
- coronary artery bypass
- case report
- healthcare
- study protocol
- placebo controlled
- early stage
- electronic health record
- combination therapy
- preterm infants
- health insurance
- peritoneal dialysis
- ejection fraction
- human health
- long non coding rna