Abstract
A retrospective review was conducted of 115 patients with middle or lower rectal carcinoma, without distant metastasis, who were consecutively treated with preoperative intraluminal brachytherapy and radical surgery (IBT group). Another 115 rectal carcinoma patients treated with surgery alone were reviewed as a control (NIBT group). We investigated whether conventional pathologic stagings were correlated with prognosis. All tumors were diagnosed by the TNM classification. According to the distribution of pathologic staging in the resected specimens, the prevalence of totally ablated tumors (stage T0) in the IBT group was significantly higher than that in the NIBT group, but there were no significant differences in the distribution of other T stages between the two groups. Good local control was achieved for the stage-T3 tumors in the IBT group, similarly to the T < or = 2 tumors in both groups. In the IBT group, the survival period of the patients with stage-T4 tumors even after radiotherapy was significantly shorter than that of those with T3 tumors (P = 0.042), while those with N < or = 2-stage tumors had significantly longer survival periods than those with N3-stage tumors (P = 0.047). These findings demonstrate the usefulness of analyzing clinicopathologic parameters to predict local control and the prolongation of survival. Determining these factors will also help to identify high-risk patients likely to require more effective adjuvant chemotherapy.
Published Version
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