Potentiating the effects of radiotherapy in rectal cancer: The role of aspirin, statins and metformin as adjuncts to therapy

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Abstract

Background:Complete tumour response (pCR) to neo-adjuvant chemo-radiotherapy for rectal cancer is associated with a reduction in local recurrence and improved disease-free and overall survival, but is achieved in only 20-30% of patients. Drug repurposing for anti-cancer treatments is gaining momentum, but the potential of such drugs as adjuncts, to increase tumour response to chemo-radiotherapy in rectal cancer, is only just beginning to be recognised.Methods:A systematic literature search was conducted and all studies investigating the use of drugs to enhance response to neo-adjuvant radiation in rectal cancer were included. 2137 studies were identified and following review 12 studies were extracted for full text review, 9 studies were included in the final analysis.Results:The use of statins or aspirin during neo-adjuvant therapy was associated with a significantly higher rate of tumour downstaging. Statins were identified as a significant predictor of pCR and aspirin users had a greater 5-year progression-free survival and overall survival. Metformin use was associated with a significantly higher overall and disease-free survival, in a subset of diabetic patients.Conclusions:Aspirin, metformin and statins are associated with increased downstaging of rectal tumours and thus may have a role as adjuncts to neoadjuvant treatment, highlighting a clear need for prospective randomised controlled trials to determine their true impact on tumour response and overall survival.

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Gash, K. J., Chambers, A. C., Cotton, D. E., Williams, A. C., & Thomas, M. G. (2017). Potentiating the effects of radiotherapy in rectal cancer: The role of aspirin, statins and metformin as adjuncts to therapy. British Journal of Cancer, 117(2), 210–219. https://doi.org/10.1038/bjc.2017.175

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