Cancer Medicine (May 2022)

Neoadjuvant concurrent chemoradiotherapy using infusional gemcitabine in locally advanced rectal cancer: A phase II trial

  • Shouki Bazarbashi,
  • Mahmoud A. Elshenawy,
  • Ahmed Badran,
  • Ali Aljubran,
  • Ahmed Alzahrani,
  • Hadeel Almanea,
  • Abdullah Alsuhaibani,
  • Ahmed Alashwah,
  • Mohamed Neimatallah,
  • Alaa Abduljabbar,
  • Luai Ashari,
  • Samar Alhomoud,
  • Hazem Ghebeh,
  • Tusneem Elhassan,
  • Nasser Alsanea,
  • Mohammed Mohiuddin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/cam4.4590
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 10
pp. 2056 – 2066

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Introduction Gemcitabine is a well‐known radiosensitizer. Herein, we tested the efficacy and toxicity of preoperative concurrent infusional gemcitabine and radiotherapy in locally advanced rectal cancer. Patients and Methods This was a phase II, single‐arm trial. Eligible patients had a diagnosis of rectal adenocarcinoma with clinical stage T3–T4 and/or nodal involvement, age ≥18 years, and no prior chemotherapy or radiotherapy. Patients received preoperative radiation at a dose of 50.4–54 Gy over 28 days with concurrent infusional gemcitabine administered at a dose of 100 mg/m2 over the course of 24 h weekly for 6 weeks. The primary endpoint was pathological complete response (pCR). Results Forty patients were recruited. Only one patient did not complete therapy due to death. Eight patients did not undergo surgery, one died, two progressed to nonresectable disease, and five withdrew consent. Five patients progressed prior to surgery, with two having unresectable metastases and three having resectable liver metastases. One was found to have peritoneal metastasis during surgery. Out of the 32 patients who underwent surgery, seven achieved pCR at a rate of 20%. With a median follow‐up of 30 months, four additional patients had a distant relapse (one had a subsequent local relapse). The 3‐year event‐free and overall survival rates were 70% and 85%, respectively. The commonest preoperative grade 3–4 toxicity included lymphopenia (50%), neutropenia (41%), anemia (15%), diarrhea (12%), abdominal pain (12%), and proctitis (8%). Conclusion Concurrent preoperative chemoradiotherapy using infusional gemcitabine for locally advanced rectal cancer achieved an encouraging degree of local control with manageable toxicity.

Keywords