This website is intended for healthcare professionals only.

Hospital Healthcare Europe
Hospital Pharmacy Europe     Newsletter    Login            

Neoadjuvant chemotherapy improves 2 year survival in operable colon cancer

Neoadjuvant chemotherapy provided 6 weeks prior to colon cancer surgery reduces residual or recurrent disease within the following 2 years

The provision of neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) for patients with operable colon cancer lead to histopathologic down-staging and better 2-year disease control according to the findings of study by Swedish and UK researchers.

Colorectal cancer is the 3rd most common cancer globally with 1.9 million new cases in 2020 and 935,173 deaths. The use of neoadjuvant chemotherapy has been shown to be of value at reducing tumour size and stage in patients with other operable cancers such as gastric and lower oesophageal adenocarcinomas but this approach has not been explored in the treatment of patients with colon cancer, possibly due to risk that treatment toxicities may compromise patient’s fitness for subsequent surgery.

However, despite the potential concerns, in the current study, researchers randomised patients 2:1 with radiologically staged T3-4, NO-2, MO colon cancer to either 6 weeks of preoperative oxaliplatin-fluoropyrimidine therapy followed by 18 weeks of postoperative adjuvant therapy (the intervention group) or postoperative chemotherapy only and which served as the control arm. They set the primary outcome as residual or recurrent disease within 2 years of randomisation, defined as no resection or macroscopic incomplete resection, that is, residual tumour or metastases following surgery. For the secondary outcomes, the team looked at several measures including surgical morbidity, histopathologic stage and cause-specific mortality.

Neoadjuvant chemotherapy and cancer surgery outcomes\

A total of 686 patients assigned to NAC and 351 control patients were included in the analysis.

The primary outcome occurred significantly less frequently in those assigned to NAC (rate ratio, RR = 0.72, 95% CI 0.54 – 0.98, p = 0.037). Moreover, there was also a reduction, albeit non-significant, in colon-cancer specific mortality (RR = 0.74, 95% CI 0.52 – 1.05, p = 0.095).

In addition, the researchers observed substantial reductions in T stage (21% vs 31%, NAC vs control, p < 0.001) and a higher proportion of NAC patients had histopathologically complete resections (94% vs 89%, p < 0.001).

Based on these findings, the authors concluded that NAC should be considered as a treatment option for patients with locally advanced colon cancer.

Citation
Morton D et al. Preoperative Chemotherapy for Operable Colon Cancer: Mature Results of an International Randomized Controlled Trial. J Clin Oncol 2023

x