Goodman Karyn A, Patton Caroline E, Fisher George A, Hoffe Sarah E, Haddock Michael G, Parikh Parag J, Kim John, Baxter Nancy N, Czito Brian G, Hong Theodore S, Herman Joseph M, Crane Christopher H, Hoffman Karen E
Department of Radiation Oncology, University of Colorado, Aurora, Colorado.
American Society of Radiation Oncology, Fairfax, Virginia.
Pract Radiat Oncol. 2016 May-Jun;6(3):166-175. doi: 10.1016/j.prro.2015.11.014. Epub 2015 Nov 24.
To summarize results of a Clinical Practice Statement on radiation therapy for stage II-III rectal cancer, which addressed appropriate customization of (neo)adjuvant radiation therapy and use of non-surgical therapy for patients who are inoperable or refuse abdominoperineal resection.
The RAND/University of California, Los Angeles, Appropriateness Method was applied to combine current evidence with multidisciplinary expert opinion. A systematic literature review was conducted and used by the expert panel to rate appropriateness of radiation therapy options for different clinical scenarios. Treatments were categorized by median rating as Appropriate, May Be Appropriate, or Rarely Appropriate.
In the neoadjuvant setting, chemoradiation was rated Appropriate and the ratings indicated short-course radiation therapy, chemotherapy alone, and no neoadjuvant therapy are potential options in selected patients. However, neoadjuvant endorectal brachytherapy was rated Rarely Appropriate. For adjuvant therapy, chemoradiation (plus ≥4 months of chemotherapy) was rated Appropriate and chemotherapy alone May Be Appropriate for most scenarios. For medically inoperable patients, definitive external beam radiation therapy and chemotherapy alone were rated May Be Appropriate, whereas endorectal brachytherapy and chemoradiation plus endorectal brachytherapy were possible approaches for some scenarios. The last option, definitive chemoradiation, was rated Appropriate to May Be Appropriate based on performance status. Finally, for patients with low-lying tumors refusing abdominoperineal resection, definitive chemoradiation alone, chemoradiation plus endorectal brachytherapy, and chemoradiation plus external beam radiation therapy were all rated Appropriate.
This Clinical Practice Statement demonstrated the central role of radiation therapy in stage II-III rectal cancer management and evaluated ways to better individualize its use in the neoadjuvant, adjuvant, and definitive settings. Ongoing trials may clarify areas of continuing uncertainty and allow further customization.
总结关于II - III期直肠癌放射治疗的临床实践声明的结果,该声明涉及(新)辅助放射治疗的适当定制以及对无法手术或拒绝腹会阴切除术的患者使用非手术治疗。
应用兰德/加利福尼亚大学洛杉矶分校适宜性方法,将当前证据与多学科专家意见相结合。进行了系统的文献综述,专家小组据此对不同临床场景下放射治疗方案的适宜性进行评分。治疗方法按中位评分分为适宜、可能适宜或很少适宜。
在新辅助治疗中,放化疗被评为适宜,评分表明短程放疗、单纯化疗以及不进行新辅助治疗是部分患者的潜在选择。然而,新辅助直肠内近距离放疗被评为很少适宜。对于辅助治疗,放化疗(加≥4个月化疗)被评为适宜,大多数情况下单纯化疗可能适宜。对于医学上无法手术的患者,单纯根治性外照射放疗和单纯化疗被评为可能适宜,而直肠内近距离放疗以及放化疗加直肠内近距离放疗在某些情况下是可行的方法。最后一种选择,单纯根治性放化疗,根据患者的体能状态被评为适宜至可能适宜。最后,对于低位肿瘤拒绝腹会阴切除术的患者,单纯根治性放化疗、放化疗加直肠内近距离放疗以及放化疗加外照射放疗均被评为适宜。
本临床实践声明证明了放射治疗在II - III期直肠癌管理中的核心作用,并评估了在新辅助、辅助和根治性治疗中更好地实现个体化应用的方法。正在进行的试验可能会澄清仍存在不确定性的领域,并允许进一步定制。