Now, keep up to date
with daily feeds of newly posted stories
about America's Seniors...click on the box
to the left
Radiation Before Surgery Keeps Colorectal
Cancer from Returning
Newswise, October 2010 — Patients with
cancer found at the end of the large
intestine called the rectum who receive one
week of radiation therapy before surgery
have a 50 percent reduction in chance that
their cancer will return after 10 years,
according to a large, randomized study
presented at the plenary session, November
1, 2010, at the 52nd Annual Meeting of the
American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO).
“We believe
that this short course of radiation will
open a new window of opportunities in the
treatment of rectal cancer,” Corrie Marijnen
M.D., lead author of the study and a
radiation oncologist at the Leiden
University Medical Center, in Leiden,
Netherlands, said.
Cancer coming
back to its original tumor site and
surrounding area, called a local recurrence,
is a major problem in the treatment of
rectal cancer patients. The mesorectum is
the fatty tissue near the rectum that
contains blood vessels and lymph nodes.
When rectal
cancer recurs, it is often in these lymph
nodes.
Therefore, a
better surgical technique called total
mesorectal excision (TME) was introduced
worldwide. It removes the entire mesorectum
and lymph nodes and is most successful when
all of the tumor and surrounding area is
removed and no cancer cells remain. In this
study, it was demonstrated that preoperative
radiotherapy is still beneficial in these
optimally operated patients.
The study
involved more than 1,800 rectal cancer
patients who were eligible for total
mesorectal excision surgery and whose
disease had spread outside of its original
location but not to other parts of the body.
Patients were randomly selected to receive
short-term radiation before surgery or
surgery alone. Researchers wanted to examine
the effectiveness of adding radiation to TME
surgery to control local recurrence among
these patients.
Findings show
that patients who underwent radiation before
surgery had a significant decrease (6
percent) in their chances of local
recurrence after 10 years of treatment,
compared to those who had did not have
radiation (11 percent).
Dr. Marijnen
said, “Our study suggests that tumors in the
middle rectum and stage III rectal cancer
patients will most greatly benefit from
receiving radiation before surgery.”
For more
information on radiation therapy for rectal
cancer, visit www.rtanswers.org
.