Abstract

Although neoadjuvant treatment is thought to provide optimal local control for stage II and III rectal cancers, many patients have been reported cured by total mesorectal excision (TME), alone or with additional chemotherapy (CTX). This study retrospectively evaluated outcomes in 2643 patients with cT3N0-2 rectal cancers undergoing curative TME during 2005-2015. Recurrence and survival outcomes were measured in three propensity-score matched groups, consisting of patients who underwent preoperative chemoradiotherapy (CRT) with postoperative CTX (NAPOC), postoperative CRT (POCRT), and exclusively postoperative CTX (EPOCT). Near-complete or complete TME was conducted in more than 95.9% of patients and 80% of scheduled dose of postoperative CTX was completed in 99%. Except for higher SR rate in the POCRT group than the NAPOC group (p = 0.008), 5-year cumulative local and systemic recurrence (LR and SR) rates were 4.9% and 15.2% for cT3N0, and 4.2% and 21% for cT3N1-2 patients (LR, p = 0.703; SR, 0.065), respectively, with no significant differences associated with treatment exposure (p = 0.11-1). The 5-year cumulative disease-free (75.6% vs 65.7%, p = 0.018) and overall survival (87.1% vs 79.4%, p = 0.018 each) rates were higher in the NAPOC group than the POCRT group with cT3N1-2. However, any significant survival differences were not identified between the NAPOC and EPOCT groups according to tumor sub-stages or locations (p = 0.395-0.971). We found any treatment modalities including competent TME and postoperative adjuvant CTX efficiently reducing LR generating robust survival outcome in the propensity-matched cohorts, demanding further randomized controlled trials by clinical sub-stages II-III.

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