34 patients with locally advanced (T4) or recurrent rectal cancer have been treated with: 1. external beam radiotherapy (45-48 Gy) + 5FU(1000 mg/m2/daily iv continuous infusion day 1-4) + MMC (10 mg/m2/daily iv, day 1); 2. surgical resection (if feasible) + IORT (10-15 Gy); 3. adjuvant chemotherapy (5FU+leucovorin, 6-8 cycles). Grade 3 acute hematological toxicity was observed in 1 case only. 23 of 34 patients underwent radical surgery. Perioperative mortality and morbidity was 0% and 17% respectively. In the 23 operated patients with a mean follow-up of 18.6 months there were 2 local recurrences, 5 blood metastases, (1 death of disease). 16 patients were shown to be NED (3-36 months)
Carcinoma of the rectum is a heterogeneous disease. The clinical spectrum identifies a subset of pat...
Abstract The value of radio-surgical protocols in the treatment of advanced rectal cancer has been ...
Object: The use of aggressive multimodality treatment including preoperative chemo-radiation, surger...
34 patients with locally advanced (T4) or recurrent rectal cancer have been treated with: 1. externa...
Over a 4-year period 35 patients with mid- (15 patients) and low (20 patients) rectal cancer clinica...
Risk of local recurrence of rectal cancer remains high despite extensive therapeutic strategies, man...
Background: In locally advanced rectal cancer with infiltration of neighbouring organs (uT4) resecta...
Rectal cancer is characterised by a substantial incidence of recurrences despite radical surgical tr...
Background: The standard therapy for patients with clinically resectable rectal cancer is generally ...
Recurrent rectal or rectosigmoid cancer is a difficult therapeutic problem. A treatment program of e...
Background: although preoperative RT (Radiation Therapy) is becoming the preferred approach for comb...
The purpose of this study is to analyze the pooled results of multimodality treatment of locally adv...
Background/Aims: To determine the percentage of responders and the resectability rate for patients w...
A total of 11 patients with recurrent rectal cancer who had been previously irradiated were treated ...
Preoperative radiochemotherapy and total mesorectal excision surgery is a recommended standard thera...
Carcinoma of the rectum is a heterogeneous disease. The clinical spectrum identifies a subset of pat...
Abstract The value of radio-surgical protocols in the treatment of advanced rectal cancer has been ...
Object: The use of aggressive multimodality treatment including preoperative chemo-radiation, surger...
34 patients with locally advanced (T4) or recurrent rectal cancer have been treated with: 1. externa...
Over a 4-year period 35 patients with mid- (15 patients) and low (20 patients) rectal cancer clinica...
Risk of local recurrence of rectal cancer remains high despite extensive therapeutic strategies, man...
Background: In locally advanced rectal cancer with infiltration of neighbouring organs (uT4) resecta...
Rectal cancer is characterised by a substantial incidence of recurrences despite radical surgical tr...
Background: The standard therapy for patients with clinically resectable rectal cancer is generally ...
Recurrent rectal or rectosigmoid cancer is a difficult therapeutic problem. A treatment program of e...
Background: although preoperative RT (Radiation Therapy) is becoming the preferred approach for comb...
The purpose of this study is to analyze the pooled results of multimodality treatment of locally adv...
Background/Aims: To determine the percentage of responders and the resectability rate for patients w...
A total of 11 patients with recurrent rectal cancer who had been previously irradiated were treated ...
Preoperative radiochemotherapy and total mesorectal excision surgery is a recommended standard thera...
Carcinoma of the rectum is a heterogeneous disease. The clinical spectrum identifies a subset of pat...
Abstract The value of radio-surgical protocols in the treatment of advanced rectal cancer has been ...
Object: The use of aggressive multimodality treatment including preoperative chemo-radiation, surger...