Journal of Personalized Medicine (Feb 2024)

The Impact on Survival of Neoadjuvant Treatment Interruptions in Locally Advanced Rectal Cancer Patients

  • Horia-Dan Lișcu,
  • Ionut-Lucian Antone-Iordache,
  • Dimitrie-Ionuț Atasiei,
  • Ioana Valentina Anghel,
  • Andreea-Teodora Ilie,
  • Taraneh Emamgholivand,
  • Andreea-Iuliana Ionescu,
  • Florica Șandru,
  • Christopher Pavel,
  • Flavia Ultimescu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm14030266
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 3
p. 266

Abstract

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The standard oncologic treatment of locally advanced rectal cancer is long-course radio-chemotherapy followed by surgery and adjuvant chemotherapy. This can result in a lengthy total treatment duration, sometimes up to one year from the diagnosis. Interruptions to neoadjuvant treatment can occur for a variety of reasons, forced or unforced. The main purpose of this study is to analyze the survival data of locally advanced rectal cancer patients who received neoadjuvant treatment and to find a cut-off point showing exactly how many days of interruption of neoadjuvant treatment the risk of death or disease relapse increases. We conducted a retrospective study on 299 patients with locally advanced rectal cancer using survival analysis (Kaplan–Meier curve and Cox regression) to determine survival probabilities for overall survival, local control, and disease-free survival. Patients with 0 to 3 days of neoadjuvant therapy interruption had a higher overall survival probability compared to patients with 4 or more days (90.2% compared to 57.9%, p-value p p-values < 0.001). Patients with tumoral or nodal downstaging experienced fewer days of interruption than patients with no downstage. These findings reinforce the need for radiation oncologists to be well-organized when starting neoadjuvant treatment for rectal cancer, in order to anticipate and prevent potential treatment interruptions and achieve the best therapeutic results.

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