Clinical and treatment-related predictors of complete response after total neoadjuvant therapy for rectal cancer in a large multicenter analysis
Georg W. Wurschi, Melanie Schneider, Jan-Niklas Becker, Bernd Frerker, Samuel M. Vorbach, Felix Ehret, Markus Diefenhardt, Fabian Schunn, Maria-Elena von Gruben, Marcel Büttner, Elgin Hoffmann, Alexander Rühle, Josephine Beier, Simone Ferdinandus, Maike Trommer, Ezgi Ceren Sahin

TL;DR
This study identifies factors that predict complete response to total neoadjuvant therapy in rectal cancer patients, including chemotherapy cycles and non-smoking status.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into clinical and treatment-related predictors of complete response in rectal cancer patients undergoing total neoadjuvant therapy.
Findings
Complete response rates increased with each additional chemotherapy cycle.
Non-smoking status was associated with higher complete response rates.
Short-course radiotherapy was linked to lower complete response rates compared to pyrimidine-based chemoradiotherapy.
Abstract
•Multicenter analysis evaluating predictors of complete response (CR) after TNT.•CR improved with each chemotherapy cycle and non-smoking status.•Adding oxaliplatin to long-course chemoradiotherapy (LCRT) did not improve CR rates.•Short-course radiotherapy had lower CR rates than pyrimidine-based LCRT.•Short-term distant-metastasis-free survival was improved after CR. Multicenter analysis evaluating predictors of complete response (CR) after TNT. CR improved with each chemotherapy cycle and non-smoking status. Adding oxaliplatin to long-course chemoradiotherapy (LCRT) did not improve CR rates. Short-course radiotherapy had lower CR rates than pyrimidine-based LCRT. Short-term distant-metastasis-free survival was improved after CR. Complete response (CR) after total neoadjuvant therapy (TNT) in rectal cancer is linked to favorable local control and enables non-operative management…
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Taxonomy
TopicsColorectal Cancer Surgical Treatments · Colorectal Cancer Screening and Detection · Colorectal and Anal Carcinomas
