Volume 15, Issue 6 pp. 662-666
Original article

Short-term outcome after neoadjuvant high-dose-rate endorectal brachytherapy or short-course external beam radiotherapy in resectable rectal cancer

C. Hesselager

C. Hesselager

Department of Surgical Sciences, Uppsala University, Uppsala University Hospital, Uppsala, Sweden

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T. Vuong

T. Vuong

Department of Radiation Oncology, Jewish General Hospital, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada

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L. Påhlman

L. Påhlman

Department of Surgical Sciences, Uppsala University, Uppsala University Hospital, Uppsala, Sweden

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C. Richard

C. Richard

Department of Colo-rectal Surgery, Montreal University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada

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S. Liberman

S. Liberman

Department of Colo-rectal Surgery, McGill University Health Center, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada

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F. Letellier

F. Letellier

Hospital Pierre Boucher, Longueil, Quebec, Canada

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J. Folkesson

Corresponding Author

J. Folkesson

Department of Surgical Sciences, Uppsala University, Uppsala University Hospital, Uppsala, Sweden

Correspondence to: Joakim Folkesson, Department of Surgery, Uppsala University Hospital, Uppsala 751 85, Sweden.

E-mail: [email protected]

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First published: 05 March 2013
Citations: 22
Some results discussed in this paper were presented at the ECCO-meeting in Stockholm, 23–27 September 2011, and at the ESCP-meeting in Copenhagen, 21–24 September 2011.

Abstract

Aim

Total mesorectal excision with preoperative radiotherapy reduces local recurrence in rectal cancer, but radiotherapy increases the risk of complications. This study compared the immediate postoperative outcome after external beam radiotherapy with outome after high-dose-rate endorectal brachytherapy (HDREBT).

Method

Patients (= 318) treated with preoperative HDREBT (6.5 Gy, daily, over 4 days) followed by surgery 4–8 weeks later were matched with 318 patients from the Swedish Rectal Cancer Register treated with short-course radiotherapy (SCRT; 5 Gy, daily, over 5 days) and surgery in the subsequent week and with 318 patients who had surgery only (i.e. no preoperative radiotherapy; RT-) All 954 patients were followed for 30 days after surgery. Complications were divided into surgical, cardiovascular and infectious.

Results

The SCRT group had fewer cardiovascular complications (3.1%) than did HDREBT (9.4%, = 0.002) and RT- (7.2%, = 0.03) groups. There was less perioperative bleeding in HDREBT patients (379.3 ml) than in SCRT (947.2 ml; < 0.0001) or RT- (918.9 ml) patients, and the re-intervention rate was lower in HDREBT (4.1%) patients than in SCRT (14.2%; = 0.005) and RT- (12.3%; < 0.005) patients. The HDREBT group had fewer R2 resections than did the SCRT and RT- groups, but had a higher proportion of R0 resections compared with the RT- group (= 0.03).

Conclusion

No major differences in postoperative complications were found. HDREBT patients had a higher rate of cardiovascular complications, but less perioperative bleeding and fewer re-interventions. A longer interval between radiotherapy and surgery may be beneficial for tumour regression and this could be reflected in the number of radical resections.

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