Treatment of Patients With Late-Stage Colorectal Cancer: ASCO Resource-Stratified Guideline

Author:

Chiorean E. Gabriela1,Nandakumar Govind23,Fadelu Temidayo4,Temin Sarah5,Alarcon-Rozas Ashley Efrain6,Bejarano Suyapa7,Croitoru Adina-Emilia8,Grover Surbhi9,Lohar Pritesh V.10,Odhiambo Andrew11,Park Se Hoon12,Garcia Erika Ruiz13,Teh Catherine14,Rose Azmina15,Zaki Bassem16,Chamberlin Mary D.16

Affiliation:

1. University of Washington, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, WA

2. Columbia Asia Hospitals, Bangalore, India

3. Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, NY

4. Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, MA

5. American Society of Clinical Oncology, Alexandria, VA

6. Clinica Angloamericana, Lima, Peru

7. Excelmedica, Liga Contra el Cancer Honduras, San Pedro Sulal, Honduras

8. Fundeni Clinical Institute, Bucharest, Romania

9. University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA

10. HCG Cancer Center, Vadodara, Gujarat, India

11. University of Nairobi, College of Health Sciences, Nairobi, Kenya

12. Samsung Medical Center, Seoul, South Korea

13. Insituto Nacional De Cancerologia, Mexico City, Mexico

14. Philippine Association of HPB Surgeons/Makati Medical Center, Makati City, Philippines

15. Independent Colorectal Patient Representative, London, United Kingdom

16. Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, Lebanon, NH

Abstract

PURPOSE To provide expert guidance to clinicians and policymakers in resource-constrained settings on the management of patients with late-stage colorectal cancer. METHODS ASCO convened a multidisciplinary, multinational Expert Panel that reviewed existing guidelines, conducted a modified ADAPTE process, and used a formal consensus process with additional experts for two rounds of formal ratings. RESULTS Existing sets of guidelines from four guideline developers were identified and reviewed; adapted recommendations from five guidelines form the evidence base and provided evidence to inform the formal consensus process, which resulted in agreement of ≥ 75% on all recommendations. RECOMMENDATIONS Common elements of symptom management include addressing clinically acute situations. Diagnosis should involve the primary tumor and, in some cases, endoscopy, and staging should involve digital rectal exam and/or imaging, depending on resources available. Most patients receive treatment with chemotherapy, where chemotherapy is available. If, after a period of chemotherapy, patients become candidates for surgical resection with curative intent of both primary tumor and liver or lung metastatic lesions on the basis of evaluation in multidisciplinary tumor boards, the guidelines recommend patients undergo surgery in centers of expertise if possible. On-treatment surveillance includes a combination of taking medical history, performing physical examinations, blood work, and imaging; specifics, including frequency, depend on resource-based setting. Additional information is available at www.asco.org/resource-stratified-guidelines .

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

Reference68 articles.

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