PurposeProspective detection of patients with advanced rectal cancer (LARC) who have a higher probability of responding to preoperative chemoradiotherapy (CRT) may provide individualized therapy. Lipidomics is an emerging science dedicated to the characterization of lipid fingerprint involved in different pato-physiological conditions. The purpose of this study is to highlight a typical lipid signature able to predict the tumor response to CRT.Experimental DesignA prospective global analysis of lipids in 54 sera from 18 LARC patients treated with preoperative CRT was performed. Samples were collected at 3 time points: before (T0), at 14th day and at 28th day of CRT. An open LC-MS/MS analysis was performed to characterize lipid expression at T0. Differential lipids were validated by an independent approach and studied during treatment.ResultsFrom 65 differential lipids highlighted between responder (RP) vs not responder (NRP) patients, five lipids were validated to predict response at T0: SM(d18:2/18:1), LysoPC (16:0/0:0), LysoPC (15:1(9z)/0:0), Lyso PE (22:5/0:0) and m/z= 842.90 corresponding to a PC containing 2 fatty acids of 40 carbons totally. The levels of these lipids were lower in NRP before treatment. The ROC curve obtained by combining these five lipid signals showed an AUC of 0.95, evidence of good sensitivity and specificity in discriminating groups.ConclusionOur results are in agreement with previous evidences about the role of lipids in determining the tumor response to therapy and suggest that the study of serum lipid could represent a useful tool in prediction of CRT response and in personalizing treatment.
Radiotherapy plus fluorouracil and mytomicin provide a better complete pathological response than radiotherapy plus cisplatin and fluorouracil and a greater rate of anal sphincter function preservation. Globally, radiochemotherapy of the anal cancer provides excellent clinical outcomes with a good profile of acute and late toxicity, without difference between the two groups studied.
Aim: Pathological complete response (pCR) and clinical outcomes [overall survival (OS), disease-free survival (DFS), locoregional control (LC)] were evaluated in a single-institution experience of different schedules of neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy (CRT) for patients with locally advanced rectal cancer (LARC). Patients and Methods: Data for 322 patients with LARC were retrospectively analyzed. pCR was evaluated according to Mandard tumor regression grade (TRG). The Kaplan-Meier method was used to estimate OS, DFS and LC. Results: Three hundred and three (94.1%) patients underwent surgery. pCR was observed in 81 patients (26.7%), with TRG1-2 rate of 41.
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