Response to neoadjuvant treatment among rectal cancer patients in a population-based cohort

Author:

Alwers Elizabeth,Jansen Lina,Kather Jakob,Amitay Efrat,Bläker Hendrik,Kloor Matthias,Tagscherer Katrin E.,Roth Wilfried,Herpel Esther,Chang-Claude Jenny,Brenner Hermann,Hoffmeister Michael

Abstract

Abstract Background In rectal cancer, prediction of tumor response and pathological complete response (pCR) to neoadjuvant treatment could contribute to refine selection of patients who might benefit from a delayed- or no-surgery approach. The aim of this study was to explore the association of clinical and molecular characteristics of rectal cancer with response to neoadjuvant treatment and to compare patient survival according to level of response. Methods Resected rectal cancer patients were selected from a population-based cohort study. Molecular tumor markers were determined from the surgical specimen. Tumor response and pCR were defined as downstaging in T or N stage and absence of tumor cells upon pathological examination, respectively. The associations of patient and tumor characteristics with tumor response and pCR were explored, and patient survival was determined by degree of response to neoadjuvant treatment. Results Among 1536 patients with rectal cancer, 602 (39%) received neoadjuvant treatment. Fifty-five (9%) patients presented pCR, and 239 (49%) and 250 (53%) patients showed downstaging of the T and N stages, respectively. No statistically significant associations were observed between patient or tumor characteristics and tumor response or pCR. Patients who presented any type of response to neoadjuvant treatment had significantly better cancer-specific and overall survival compared with non-responders. Conclusion In this study, patient characteristics were not associated with response to neoadjuvant treatment, and molecular characteristics determined after surgical resection of the tumor were not predictive of pCR or tumor downstaging. Future studies should include molecular biomarkers from biopsy samples before neoadjuvant treatment.

Funder

German Research Council

Interdisciplinary Research Program of the National Center for Tumor Diseases

German Federal Ministry of Education and Research

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Gastroenterology

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