학술논문

International Preoperative Rectal Cancer Management: Staging, Neoadjuvant Treatment, and Impact of Multidisciplinary Teams
Document Type
article
Source
World Journal of Surgery. 34(11)
Subject
Cancer
Colo-Rectal Cancer
Digestive Diseases
Clinical Research
Biomedical Imaging
Health Care Surveys
Humans
Internationality
Neoadjuvant Therapy
Neoplasm Staging
Patient Care Team
Practice Guidelines as Topic
Preoperative Care
Rectal Neoplasms
Treatment Outcome
International Rectal Cancer Study Group
Clinical Sciences
Surgery
Language
Abstract
BackgroundLittle is known regarding variations in preoperative treatment and practice for rectal cancer (RC) on an international level, yet practice variation may result in differences in recurrence and survival rates.MethodsOne hundred seventy-three international colorectal centers were invited to participate in a survey of preoperative management of rectal cancer.ResultsOne hundred twenty-three (71%) responded, with a majority of respondents from North America, Europe, and Asia. Ninety-three percent have more than 5 years' experience with rectal cancer surgery. Fifty-five percent use CT scan, 35% MRI, 29% ERUS, 12% digital rectal examination and 1% PET scan in all RC cases. Seventy-four percent consider threatened circumferential margin (CRM) an indication for neoadjuvant treatment. Ninety-two percent prefer 5-FU-based long-course neoadjuvant chemoradiation therapy (CRT). A significant difference in practice exists between the US and non-US surgeons: poor histological differentiation as an indication for CRT (25% vs. 7.0%, p = 0.008), CRT for stage II and III rectal cancer (92% vs. 43%, p = 0.0001), MRI for all RC patients (20% vs. 42%, p = 0.03), and ERUS for all RC patients (43% vs. 21%, p = 0.01). Multidisciplinary team meetings significantly influence decisions for MRI (RR = 3.62), neoadjuvant treatment (threatened CRM, RR = 5.67, stage II + III RR = 2.98), quality of pathology report (RR = 4.85), and sphincter-saving surgery (RR = 3.81).ConclusionsThere was little consensus on staging, neoadjuvant treatment, and preoperative management of rectal cancer. Regular multidisciplinary team meetings influence decisions about neoadjuvant treatment and staging methods.