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- Title
Multimodal Treatment of Gastrointestinal Tract Tumors: Consequences for Surgery.
- Authors
Siewert, J. Rüdiger; Stein, Hubert J.; von Rahden, Burkhard H. A.
- Abstract
Formerly an exclusive business of surgery, gastrointestinal (GI) tumors are nowadays increasingly approached with multimodal strategies. Neoadjuvant concepts have had a particularly far-reaching impact on surgery and have contributed to improved survival. Modern pre-treatment staging and risk assessment provide the basis for decision on one of three general treatment concepts (1) Early cancers, confined to the mucosal/submucosal layers, are approached with primary surgery, without prior antineoplastic therapy. (2) Systematically metastasized tumors receive merely palliative treatment. (3) Locally advanced cancers are increasingly approached with neoadjuvant strategies. The benefit from these preoperative protocols is proven for diverse entities, but is evidently confined to a specific subgroup patients, i.e., the responders to neoadjuvant treatment. These are the ones benefiting most from subsequent surgical resection, which is required to ensure complete removal of the residual tumor tissue, as complete tumor regression occurs very rarely and cannot be proven without a specimen. The fact that responders will benefit and non-responders will not benefit or will even deteriorate during the neoadjuvant treatment makes early response prediction most demanding. An amazing new approach is the use of position emission tomography with fluro-desoxyglucose (FDG-PET) to assess the "metabolic response," which is possible as early as 14 days after initiation of the neoadjuvant protocol. This strategy otters the chance for modulating the surgical approach in accord i.e., with such metrobolic response termination of the protocol and proceeding to resection in the case of nonresponse. The future of GI cancer surgery is multimodal therapy in a response-based fashion and requires response-based trials for further evaluation.
- Subjects
GASTROINTESTINAL system; TUMORS; COMBINED modality therapy; SURGICAL complications; TUMOR surgery; DIGESTIVE organs
- Publication
World Journal of Surgery, 2005, Vol 29, Issue 8, p940
- ISSN
0364-2313
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s00268-005-0010-4