Abstract

despite the advances in preoperative hypofractionated-accelerated radiotherapy for patients with locally advanced rectal cancer, postoperative radiotherapy delivered with standard fractionation (46-50 Gy in 5weeks) remains a standard adjuvant schedule. The role of hypofractionated-accelerated radiotherapy in a postoperative setting remains largely unexplored. eighty-eight patients with rectal cancer infiltrating the rectal wall and/or having metastasis to the perirectal lymph nodes were treated with surgery followed by adjuvant chemotherapy and, subsequently, with hypofractionated-accelerated radiotherapy. Ten fractions of 3.4 Gy were delivered to the pelvis for 10 consecutive fractions, within 12days. The follow-up of patients alive at the time of analysis ranges from 12-120months (median 48). mild abdominal discomfort and diarrhoea were frequent, but medical medication was demanded in 14/88 (15.9%) of patients. The incidence of late toxicities was low; 4/88 (3.5%) patients complained for intermittent intestinal urgency. Locoregional recurrence occurred in 8/88 patients (9%). The 5-year locoregional relapse-free survival was achieved in 89.7% of patients, and this dropped to 84% in node-positive patients (P=0.45). The 5-year disease-specific overall survival was 72.4%. Nodal involvement showed a trend to negatively affect prognosis (5-year overall survival 68.2 vs. 79.6%; P=0.23). postoperative hypofractionated-accelerated radiotherapy has minimal early and late toxicity. The locoregional control and disease-specific survival rates are similar to the expected from conventional postoperative chemoradiotherapy. The 2.5-fold decrease of radiotherapy treatment time, reduction of waiting lists and the lower overall cost of radiotherapy are additional benefits associated with hypofractionated-accelerated radiotherapy.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call