Radiation therapy(RT)is typically applied using one of two standard approaches for preoperative treatment of resectable locally advanced rectal cancer(LARC):short-course RT(SC-RT)alone or long-course RT(LC-RT)with con...Radiation therapy(RT)is typically applied using one of two standard approaches for preoperative treatment of resectable locally advanced rectal cancer(LARC):short-course RT(SC-RT)alone or long-course RT(LC-RT)with concurrent fluorouracil(5-FU)chemotherapy.The Phase II single-arm KROG 11-02 study using intermediate-course(IC)(33 Gy(Gray)/10 fr(fraction)with concurrent capecitabine)preoperative chemoradiotherapy(CRT)demonstrated a pathologically complete response rate and a sphincter-sparing rate that were close to those of LC-CRT.The current trial aim to compare the pathological/oncological outcomes,toxicity,and quality of life results of LC-CRT and IC-CRT in cases of LARC.The prescribed dose was 33 Gy/10 fr for the IC-CRT group and 50.4 Gy/28 fr for the LC-CRT group.Concurrent chronomodulated capecitabine(Brunch regimen)1650 mg/m2/daily chemotherapy treatment was applied in both groups.The European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire-Colorectal Cancer Module(EORTC QLQ-CR29)was administered at baseline and at three and six months after CRT.A total of 60 patients with LARC randomized to receive IC-CRT(n=30)or LC-CRT(n=30)were included in this phase II randomized trial.No significant difference was noted between groups in terms of pathological outcomes,including pathological response rates(ypT0N0-complete response:23.3%vs.16.7%,respectively,and ypT0-2N0-downstaging:50%for each;p=0.809)and Dworak score-based pathological tumor regression grade(Grade 4-complete response:23.3 vs.16.7%,p=0.839).The 5-year overall survival(73.3 vs.86.7%,p=0.173)rate was also similar.The acute radiation dermatitis(p<0.001)and any hematological toxicity(p=0.004)rates were significantly higher in the LC-CRT group,while no significant difference was noted between treatment groups in terms of baseline,third month,and sixth month EORTC QLQ-CR29 scores.展开更多
Background: We examined the impact of adjuvant modalities on resected pancreatic and periampullary adenocarcinoma(PAC).Methods: A total of 563 patients who were curatively resected for PAC were retrospectively ana...Background: We examined the impact of adjuvant modalities on resected pancreatic and periampullary adenocarcinoma(PAC).Methods: A total of 563 patients who were curatively resected for PAC were retrospectively analyzed between 2003 and 2013.Results: Of 563 patients, 472 received adjuvant chemotherapy(CT) alone, chemoradiotherapy(CRT) alone, and chemoradiotherapy plus chemotherapy(CRT-CT) were analyzed. Of the 472 patients, 231 were given CRT-CT, 26 were given CRT, and 215 were given CT. The median recurrence-free survival(RFS) and overall survival(OS) were 12 and 19 months, respectively. When CT and CRT-CT groups were compared, there was no significant difference with respect to both RFS and OS, and also there was no difference in RFS and OS among CRT-CT, CT and CRT groups. To further investigate the impact of radiation on subgroups, patients were stratified according to lymph node status and resection margins. In node-positive patients, both RFS and OS were significantly longer in CRT-CT than CT. In contrast, there was no significant differencebetween groups when patients with node-negative disease or patients with or without positive surgical margins were considered.Conclusions: Addition of radiation to CT has a survival benefit in patients with node-positive disease following pancreatic resection.展开更多
文摘Radiation therapy(RT)is typically applied using one of two standard approaches for preoperative treatment of resectable locally advanced rectal cancer(LARC):short-course RT(SC-RT)alone or long-course RT(LC-RT)with concurrent fluorouracil(5-FU)chemotherapy.The Phase II single-arm KROG 11-02 study using intermediate-course(IC)(33 Gy(Gray)/10 fr(fraction)with concurrent capecitabine)preoperative chemoradiotherapy(CRT)demonstrated a pathologically complete response rate and a sphincter-sparing rate that were close to those of LC-CRT.The current trial aim to compare the pathological/oncological outcomes,toxicity,and quality of life results of LC-CRT and IC-CRT in cases of LARC.The prescribed dose was 33 Gy/10 fr for the IC-CRT group and 50.4 Gy/28 fr for the LC-CRT group.Concurrent chronomodulated capecitabine(Brunch regimen)1650 mg/m2/daily chemotherapy treatment was applied in both groups.The European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire-Colorectal Cancer Module(EORTC QLQ-CR29)was administered at baseline and at three and six months after CRT.A total of 60 patients with LARC randomized to receive IC-CRT(n=30)or LC-CRT(n=30)were included in this phase II randomized trial.No significant difference was noted between groups in terms of pathological outcomes,including pathological response rates(ypT0N0-complete response:23.3%vs.16.7%,respectively,and ypT0-2N0-downstaging:50%for each;p=0.809)and Dworak score-based pathological tumor regression grade(Grade 4-complete response:23.3 vs.16.7%,p=0.839).The 5-year overall survival(73.3 vs.86.7%,p=0.173)rate was also similar.The acute radiation dermatitis(p<0.001)and any hematological toxicity(p=0.004)rates were significantly higher in the LC-CRT group,while no significant difference was noted between treatment groups in terms of baseline,third month,and sixth month EORTC QLQ-CR29 scores.
文摘Background: We examined the impact of adjuvant modalities on resected pancreatic and periampullary adenocarcinoma(PAC).Methods: A total of 563 patients who were curatively resected for PAC were retrospectively analyzed between 2003 and 2013.Results: Of 563 patients, 472 received adjuvant chemotherapy(CT) alone, chemoradiotherapy(CRT) alone, and chemoradiotherapy plus chemotherapy(CRT-CT) were analyzed. Of the 472 patients, 231 were given CRT-CT, 26 were given CRT, and 215 were given CT. The median recurrence-free survival(RFS) and overall survival(OS) were 12 and 19 months, respectively. When CT and CRT-CT groups were compared, there was no significant difference with respect to both RFS and OS, and also there was no difference in RFS and OS among CRT-CT, CT and CRT groups. To further investigate the impact of radiation on subgroups, patients were stratified according to lymph node status and resection margins. In node-positive patients, both RFS and OS were significantly longer in CRT-CT than CT. In contrast, there was no significant differencebetween groups when patients with node-negative disease or patients with or without positive surgical margins were considered.Conclusions: Addition of radiation to CT has a survival benefit in patients with node-positive disease following pancreatic resection.