Vol 3, No 3 (2014)
- Year: 2014
- Published: 26.09.2014
- Articles: 7
- URL: https://onco-surgery.info/jour/issue/view/5
REVIEW
PROMISES FOR TREATING COLON CANCER PATIENTS WITH BRAF GENE MUTATION
Abstract
Colon cancer represents a heterogenous disease group, which differ by cancerogenesis mechanisms, molecular alterations, prognosis and treatment possibilities. In modern clinical practice assessment of KRAS and NRAS genes status is already necessary in order to prescribe anti-EGFR treatment for metastatic disease. A separate poor prognosis group are patients with BRAF mutation. In this review we will focus on biological features of BRAF-mutant colorectal cancer, its epidemiology, clinical features on different stages, treatment choice and promising new treatment possibilities.
9-16
MORPHOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT OF LATERAL EDGE OF A RESECTION AS A FACTOR OF THE FORECAST OF LOCAL RECURRENCE AT A CANCER OF A RECTUM. FORECASTING OF RECURRENCE OF A TUMOR BY MEANS OF AN ASSESSMENT OF MARKERS OF A COLORECTAL CANCER
Abstract
This is a review of the literature on the application of magnetic resonance imaging as a method of preoperative staging of colorectal cancer, total mesorectal excision with pathologic evaluation of the lateral resection margin and the clinical significance of molecular markers of drug therapy.
17-22
ORIGINAL REPORTS
COMBINATION NEOADJUVANT THERMOCHEMICAL THERAPY IN PATIENTS WITH RECTAL CANCER
Abstract
A new combined treatment scheme with short-course chemoradiotherapy and 2 selective radiosensitizers (metronidazole in a polymeric composition and local hyperthermia) is investigated in this article.
Material and methods. 77 T1–3N0–2M0 rectal cancer patients treatment data was analyzed. All patients received 5 Ч 5 Gy radiotherapy with capecitabine 1300 mg/m2 days 1–5 per os and radiosensitization with local hyperthermia and metronidazole.
Results. Investigated treatment scheme has acceptable toxicity and leads to high local control rate (none of the patients experienced local recurrence). 7 (9.1 %) patients developed distant metastases. 59 (76.6 %) patients had sphincter-sparing surgery. Median followup was 65.6 months. 5-year survival rate was 81.7 %.
Conclusion. Developed treatment scheme is safe and leads to high local control rate.
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