Conference Coverage

‘Watch and wait’ good for most – but not all – rectal cancers


 

EXPERT ANALYSIS FROM THE ACS CLINICAL CONGRESS

Chemotherapy and radiation cure 70%-80% of patients with low rectal cancer.

It’s for them that the watch-and-wait paradigm was established over a decade ago, and widely adopted since then. The idea is to hold off on surgery after a complete response to chemotherapy and radiation, to see if the patient really needs it.

While most do not, tumors regrow in 20%-30%, and when they come back, they tend to be aggressive, with poor outcomes. Patients in those situations would have been better off with upfront surgery.

The problem right now is that there’s no way to predict who will be cured by neoadjuvant therapy and whose tumor will come back, said Philip Paty, MD. FACS, a colorectal surgeon at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York.

“There are some who are probably harmed by the watch-and-wait paradigm. The risk of local regrowth is hardbaked into [the model]; we haven’t been able to eliminate it,” he said at the annual clinical congress of the American College of Surgeons..

Dr. Paty is one of many investigators working to identify those at risk. In the meantime, watch-and-wait patients need to be followed closely, particularly in the first 2 years. Surgery is the best option at the first sign of regrowth. Dr. Paty explained his follow-up protocol, as well as the current state of watch and wait for low rectal cancer, in an interview at the meeting.

He also talked about overcoming hurdles. The risk of surgery, including permanent bowel and sexual dysfunction, is so great “that many patients latch onto watch and wait and won’t let go. They don’t come back for follow-up, or resist the idea of surgery even if it’s needed,” he said.

Recommended Reading

Study finds gaps in bundled colectomy payments
MDedge Surgery
FDA approves marketing of device to control GI bleeding
MDedge Surgery
Hemostatic clipping cuts bleeds after large polyp removal
MDedge Surgery
ERAS adoption for colectomy yielded state-wide outcome improvements
MDedge Surgery
Neoadjuvant-treated N2 rectal cancer linked to PCR failure
MDedge Surgery
Surgical outcomes for UC worse since introduction of biologics
MDedge Surgery
How to use transgastric necrosectomy for midline pancreatitis
MDedge Surgery
'Liver first' for select stage IV colon cancer gaining traction
MDedge Surgery
Quality programs drive improvements in colorectal surgery outcomes
MDedge Surgery
How to slash colorectal surgery infection rates
MDedge Surgery