PURPOSENeoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) has potential advantages over standard postoperative chemotherapy for locally advanced colon cancer but requires formal evaluation.METHODSPatients with radiologically staged T3-4, N0-2, M0 colon cancer were randomly allocated (2:1) to 6 weeks oxaliplatin-fluoropyrimidine preoperatively plus 18 postoperatively (NAC group) or 24 weeks postoperatively (control group). Patients with RAS-wildtype tumors could also be randomly assigned 1:1 to receive panitumumab or not during NAC. The primary end point was residual disease or recurrence within 2 years. Secondary outcomes included surgical morbidity, histopathologic stage, regression grade, completeness of resection, and cause-specific mortality. Log-rank analyses were by intention-to-treat.RESULTSOf 699 patients allocated to NAC, 674 (96%) started and 606 (87%) completed NAC. In total, 686 of 699 (98.1%) NAC patients and 351 of 354 (99.2%) control patients underwent surgery. Thirty patients (4.3%) allocated to NAC developed obstructive symptoms requiring expedited surgery, but there were fewer serious postoperative complications with NAC than with control. NAC produced marked T and N downstaging and histologic tumor regression (all P
CITATION STYLE
Morton, D., Seymour, M., Magill, L., Handley, K., Glasbey, J., Glimelius, B., … Gray, R. (2023). Preoperative Chemotherapy for Operable Colon Cancer: Mature Results of an International Randomized Controlled Trial. In Journal of Clinical Oncology (Vol. 41, pp. 1541–1552). Lippincott Williams and Wilkins. https://doi.org/10.1200/JCO.22.00046
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