Intraoperative radiation therapy for curatively resected rectal cancer

2001 
PURPOSE: Intraoperative radiotherapy has been used for local control of locally advanced rectal cancer. The aim of this study was to investigate the efficacy of intraoperative radiotherapy for curatively resected rectal cancer. METHODS: Between 1982 and 1998, intraoperative radiotherapy was administered in combination with curative resection in 78 patients with adenocarcinoma of the middle or lower third of the rectum (intraoperative radiotherapy group). Sixty-two of the patients had received preoperative radiotherapy with 20 Gy. Intraoperative radiotherapy was performed by a new strategy in which an electron beam was administered as uniformly as possible to the entire dissected surface of the pelvis. Retrospective comparisons were made with 248 patients treated by surgery alone during the same period (non-intraoperative radiotherapy group). RESULTS: The differences in tumor stage or surgical procedures between the two groups were not statistically significant. Survival, disease-free survival, and local recurrence-free survival in the intraoperative radiotherapy group were significantly more favorable than in the non-intraoperative radiotherapy group (P=0.01,P=0.04, andP=0.02). Differences in survival were observed in Stage II patients but not in Stage I or Stage III patients. The local failure rate was 2.6 percent in the intraoperative radiotherapy group and 11.3 percent in the non-intraoperative radiotherapy group, and the difference was significant (P=0.02). The distant metastasis rate was 18.0 percent in the intraoperative radiotherapy group and 19.5 percent in the non-intraoperative radiotherapy group, and the difference was not significant. There was a significantly higher rate of wound infection in the intraoperative radiotherapy group, but no infections were serious. CONCLUSIONS: In patients with adenocarcinoma of the middle or lower third of the rectum, intraoperative radiotherapy to the entire dissected surface of the pelvis reduced local recurrence in Stage II and Stage III patients and improved survival in Stage II patients.
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