Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6255335 Surgery 2015 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

IntroductionThe aim of this study was to compare the short- and long-term outcomes between short-course radiotherapy with delayed surgery (SRT-delay) and a standard conventional chemoradiotherapy (CRT) regimen.MethodsTwo collaborating institutions adopted different regimens; the SRT-delay regimen was selected by Meiwa Hospital and the CRT regimen was selected by Hyogo College of Medicine. The inclusion criteria were T3 middle and low rectal cancer patients treated with radical surgery after preoperative therapy. The median follow-up period was 44 months (range, 12-85).ResultsFrom 2007 to 2013, 104 patients were treated using the SRT-delay regimen and 61 patients were treated using the CRT regimen. The pretreatment characteristics of the 2 groups were not significantly different. The sphincter-preserving rate (93.3%, 85.2%), T downstaging (37.5%, 37.7%), ypN(−) (74.0%, 67.2%), postoperative complications and the bowel, and urinary and sexual functioning of the SRT-delay regimen were noninferior to those of the CRT regimen. The 3-year local recurrence-free survival, recurrence-free survival, and overall survival in the SRT-delay and CRT groups were 90.6% and 90.6% (P = .764), 83.8% and 78.3% (P = .687) and 96.0% and 92.8% (P = .833), respectively.ConclusionThe SRT-delay regimen was noninferior in terms of the downstaging effect, and oncologic and functional outcomes compared with the CRT regimen for T3 middle and low rectal cancer.

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