Patients with inoperable rectal cancer have a remote chance of 5-year survival. In an attempt to improve this poor prognosis a combined radiochemotherapeutic regimen in a split form followed by long term chemotherapy maintenance was used in their management. From January 1971 until December 1980, th
Adjuvant multimodality treatment of rectal cancer
β Scribed by D. J. Galloway; Dr. A. M. Cohen; B. Shank; M. A. Friedman
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1989
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 979 KB
- Volume
- 76
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0007-1323
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
It has long been recognized that curative surgery as the sole treatment for rectal cancer yields disappointing results. There is now a growing body of evidence from prospective randomized clinical trials to support the role of adjuvant therapy for patients whose primary tumour has spread through the rectal wall or has associated lymph node involvement. Carefully planned radiation therapy with adequate doses and fields can reduce the risk of locoregional failure. Chemotherapeutic agents delivered either systemically or regionally may also contribute to better disease control and survival. A number of diagnostic and therapeutic issues still need to be addressed in order to use the available adjuvant treatment methods most appropriately. Efforts to refine patient selection, to enhance therapeutic effect and to minimize toxicity are likely to improve the outlook for patients with resectable rectal cancer.
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Background and Objectives: The 1990s have established the contribution of multimodality therapy in the management of IIIb noninflammatory breast cancer (IIIb NIBC), by reducing the odds of recurrence and death. Methods: A total of 300 women with IIIb NIBC received a multimodality therapy. The treatm