The Role of Contact Brachytherapy X-Ray 50 kV (CBX) for Organ Preservation in Rectal Cancer: A Series of 61 Patients

Author(s):  
K. Benezery ◽  
A. Frin ◽  
F. Zhou ◽  
E. Francois ◽  
J. Gérard
Author(s):  
J. Doyen ◽  
K. Benezery ◽  
O. Chapet ◽  
J.M. Hannoun-Levi ◽  
J.P. Gerard

2015 ◽  
Vol 33 (3_suppl) ◽  
pp. 676-676
Author(s):  
Jerome Doyen ◽  
Eric Francois ◽  
Anne-Claire Frin ◽  
Karen Benezery ◽  
Fuxiang Zhou ◽  
...  

676 Background: Organ preservation (avoiding TME surgery) for T2 T3 a-b rectal cancer is a field of active clinical research. Contact X Ray CXB combined with external beam radiotherapy (EBRT) ± concurrent chemotherapy (CRT) is an attractive method to achieve clinical complete response (cCR) and consequently rectal preservation. We report an overview of 120 patients treated with CXB+EBRT over a 25 year period in Lyon since 1986 and then in Nice until 2012. Methods: Between 1986 and 2012, 120 patients presenting rectal adenocarcinoma T2 T3a-b (distal rectum: 87; middle rectum: 33) were treated with CXB +EBRT with conservative intent. In Lyon (1986-2001), 80 patients median age: 73y; T2:52; T3:28) risk were treated using CXB (80-110 Gy/3-4 fr/4-6 weeks) followed by EBRT (39 Gy/13 fr/18 days) and 192 Iridium implant boost (20 Gy). When cCR was achieved, close surveillance was proposed. In Nice (2002-2012), 40 patients (median age 81y; T2:22; T3:18) received CXB same regimen as in Lyon (using new Papillon 50 machine since 2009) + EBRT (45-50 Gy/5weeks) with concurrent chemotherapy (5-FU or Capecitabine). When cCR was achieved close surveillance was proposed or local excision (13 pts). Results: Median follow-up time 58 months in both groups. Local relapse occurred mainly in the 2 first years. Isolated lymph node recurrence <5%. Bowel function good or excellent when rectum preserved. Main clinical outcomes in table (some improved results in Nice possibly due to better treatment approach and patient selection). Conclusions: CXB with EBRT and concurrent capecitabine achieve safely high rate of cCR with organ preservation. The OPERA randomized trial will reproduce Lyon R 96 trial (Gerard JP, JCO 2004;22:2404) and test the superiority of CXB boost for organ preservation. [Table: see text]


2018 ◽  
Vol 127 ◽  
pp. S408
Author(s):  
J.P. Gérard ◽  
N. Barbet ◽  
C. Dejean ◽  
K. Benezery ◽  
R. Coquard ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 90 (1080) ◽  
pp. 20170175 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arthur Sun Myint ◽  
Fraser McLean Smith ◽  
Simon William Gollins ◽  
Helen Wong ◽  
Christopher Rao ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 28 ◽  
pp. v170
Author(s):  
J-P. Gérard ◽  
N. Barbet ◽  
K. Benezery Sanna ◽  
R. Coquard ◽  
Y. Chateau ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 72 ◽  
pp. 124-136 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anne Claire Frin ◽  
Ludovic Evesque ◽  
Jocelyn Gal ◽  
Karène Benezery ◽  
Eric François ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Roeder ◽  
E. Meldolesi ◽  
S. Gerum ◽  
V. Valentini ◽  
C. Rödel

Abstract The role of radiation therapy in the treatment of (colo)-rectal cancer has changed dramatically over the past decades. Introduced with the aim of reducing the high rates of local recurrences after conventional surgery, major developments in imaging, surgical technique, systemic therapy and radiation delivery have now created a much more complex environment leading to a more personalized approach. Functional aspects including reduction of acute or late treatment-related side effects, sphincter or even organ-preservation and the unsolved problem of still high distant failure rates have become more important while local recurrence rates can be kept low in the vast majority of patients. This review summarizes the actual role of radiation therapy in different subgroups of patients with rectal cancer, including the current standard approach in different subgroups as well as recent developments focusing on neoadjuvant treatment intensification and/or non-operative treatment approaches aiming at organ-preservation.


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