Medical News
Surgery
Become a Member Today!
Email
Password
Remember me
Forgot your Password?

Invite Code?


Article ID

Home
General Surgery
Messages
Conferences
Jobs
Newsletters
My Library
Topics in
Surgery
        Basic Science/Genetics
        Breast
        Cardiac Surgery
        Clinical Pharmacology
        Colo-Rectal
        Critical Care
        Economics of Medicine
        Endocrine
        Head and Neck
        Hepatobiliary/Pancreas
        Hernia/GI
        Infectious Disease
        Laparoscopy/Endoscopy
        Neurosurgery
        Pain Management
        Patient Management
        Pediatric Surgery
        Plastic/Reconstructive
        Popular Press
        Radiology/Diagnostics
        Robotics/VAT
        Surgical Oncology
        Surgical Technique
        Thoracic
        Transplantation
        Trauma/Burn
        Vascular
        Wound Healing
 
Help
Resource Center
RSS News Feeds
Send Newsletter
to a Friend
Top Ten Searches
radiocontrast  radiocontrast
anti-idiotype  anti-idiotype
breast reconstruction  breast reconstruction
suture scar  suture scar
pro lactinoma  pro lactinoma
central line  central line
hiatal  hiatal
av malformation  av malformation
aneurysm  aneurysm
gastric band  gastric band
 
Sponsor
MDLinx Email Article

To email this article, enter your own "From Email" address,
the recipient's "To Email" address, and click the "Send Email" button.
You may send to up to 5 email addresses.
*From Email:  
*To Email:  
To Email:  
To Email:  
To Email:  
To Email:  
The role of preoperative chemotherapy in patients with resectable colorectal liver metastases
Benoist S et al. - In a review of the potential benefits and disadvantages of neoadjuvant chemotherapy administered before surgery to pts with initially resectable metastases, it was found that treatment of most pts with liver metastases—those with resectable metastases and those with initially unresectable metastases—should start with chemotherapy. If drugs are well chosen and duration of treatment is monitored with care during multidisciplinary meetings, benefits outweigh potential disadvantages.

Methods
  • Liver metastases develop in 40–50% of pts with colorectal cancer (CRC) and represent the major cause of death.
  • Surgical resection remains the only treatment procedure that can ensure long-term survival and provide cure when liver metastases can be totally resected with clear margins, when the primary cancer is controlled, and when there is no nonresectable extrahepatic disease.
  • 5-yr survival rate after surgical resection of colorectal metastases varies from 25% to 55%, but cancer relapse is observed in most pts.
  • This study reviewed the potential benefits and disadvantages of neoadjuvant chemotherapy administered before surgery to pts with initially resectable metastases.

Results
  • EORTC study 40983 has shown that neoadjuvant chemotherapy could reduce the risk of relapse by one-quarter, and allows testing of chemosensitivity of the cancer, to help determine appropriateness of further treatments, and observe progressive disease, which contraindicates immediate surgery.
  • Neoadjuvant chemotherapy can induce damage to the remnant liver.
  • Oxaliplatin-based combination regimens are associated with increased risk of vascular lesions, whereas irinotecan-containing regimens have been associated with increased risk of steatosis and steatohepatitis.
  • Analysis of EORTC study 40983 showed that administration of 6 cycles of neoadjuvant systemic chemotherapy with 5-fluorouracil, leucovorin, and oxaliplatin (FOLFOX) was associated with moderate increase of risk of reversible complications after surgery, but mortality rate was <1% and not increased.
  • If pts are not overtreated, chemotherapy before surgery is well tolerated.
  • Integration of novel targeted agents in combination with cytotoxic drugs is a promising way to improve outcome in pts with advanced CRC.
  • Preliminary trials have shown that targeted agents combined with cytotoxic regimens can increase tumor response rates.
  • Another impact of preoperative chemotherapy is that metastases that respond to treatment may no longer be visible on computed tomography scan or at surgery.
  • Pts should be carefully monitored and receive surgery before metastases disappear.
[more...]
Sponsor

Read a Different Specialty

General Surgery Articles
Allergy/Immunology
Anesthesiology
Cardiology
Dermatology
Drugs
Emergency Medicine
Endocrinology
ENT
Family Medicine
Gastroenterology
Hematology-Oncology
Infectious Disease
Internal Medicine
Nephrology
Neurology
OB/Gyn
Ophthalmology
Orthopedics
Pain
Pediatrics
Practice Management
Psychiatry
Pulmonology
Radiology
Rheumatology
Surgery
Urology

Medical News & Profession Index

General Surgery Articles
Dentist
Hospital Administrator
Nurse
    Medical Students
Nurse Practitioner
Pharma/Drug Marketer
    Pharmacist
Physician Assistants
Article Search
Keyword:
Search:
Published within:
Sort By:
Date Relevance
    
Sponsor
About MDLinx  |  Contact  |  Advertise with MDLinx  |  Site Map  |  Privacy Policy  |  Terms of Use  |  Sign Up For Newsletters  |  Recommend this Site

English |  Español |  Français |  Deutsch |  中文 |  Руccкий |  Norsk |  Nederlands |  Português |  Italiano

©1999-2009 MDLinx, Inc.