New Opportunities for Minimizing Toxicity in Rectal Cancer Management

Author:

Couwenberg Alice M.1,Varvoglis Dimitrios N.2ORCID,Grieb Brian C.3,Marijnen Corrie A.M.14,Ciombor Kristen K.3,Guillem Jose G.5

Affiliation:

1. Department of Radiation Oncology, Netherlands Cancer Institute, Amsterdam, The Netherlands

2. Department of Surgery, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC

3. Vanderbilt University Medical Center/Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center, Nashville, TN

4. Department of Radiation Oncology, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, The Netherlands

5. Department of Surgery, Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC

Abstract

Advances in multimodal management of locally advanced rectal cancer (LARC), consisting of preoperative chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy followed by surgery with or without adjuvant chemotherapy, have improved local disease control and patient survival but are associated with significant risk for acute and long-term morbidity. Recently published trials, evaluating treatment dose intensification via the addition of preoperative induction or consolidation chemotherapy (total neoadjuvant therapy [TNT]), have demonstrated improved tumor response rates while maintaining acceptable toxicity. In addition, TNT has led to an increased number of patients achieving a clinical complete response and thus eligible to pursue a nonoperative, organ-preserving, watch and wait approach, thereby avoiding toxicities associated with surgery, such as bowel dysfunction and stoma-related complications. Ongoing trials using immune checkpoint inhibitors in patients with mismatch repair-deficient tumors suggest that this subgroup of patients with LARC could potentially be treated with immunotherapy alone, sparing them the toxicity associated with preoperative treatment and surgery. However, the majority of rectal cancers are mismatch repair-proficient and less responsive to immune checkpoint inhibitors and require multimodal management. The synergy noted in preclinical studies between immunotherapy and radiotherapy on immunogenic tumor cell death has led to the design of ongoing clinical trials that explore the benefit of combining radiotherapy, chemotherapy, and immunotherapy (mainly of immune checkpoint inhibitors) and aim to increase the number of patients eligible for organ preservation.

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

Subject

General Medicine

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