ABSTRACT

Acknowledgments .............................................................................................................. 556

References .......................................................................................................................... 556

In 2005, 40,340 new cases of rectal cancer were diagnosed in the United States [1]. The

mainstay of therapy of this malignancy was surgery [2]. For patients with early stage tumors

(lesions confined to the rectal wall without lymph node metastases), 5 year survival is

excellent with recent series reporting 80% or greater cure rates [3]. In contrast, local and

systemic failures pose significant challenges to patients undergoing potentially curative resec-

tion for more advanced staged tumors [4]. Treatment strategies of preoperative or post-

operative chemotherapy and radiation therapy have been employed to prevent local and

systemic failure and improve survival for these patients. Over the past 15 years, randomized

trials have demonstrated statistically significant improvements in local control, freedom

from distant metastases, and survival with radiation therapy and concurrent and maintenance

5-fluorouracil (5-FU)-based chemotherapy [5-12]. In a large Intergroup trial, the 7 year

disease-free survival of 1695 patients with stage II and III rectal cancer undergoing resection

and postoperative radiation therapy with concurrent and maintenance 5-FU-based chemo-

therapy was only 50% [11]. Despite the best contemporary adjuvant therapy, local recurrence

and systemic failure remain important challenges, particularly in the treatment of patients

with more advanced tumors. Innovative therapies should be pursued to improve on these

outcomes.