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Review
. 2002 Oct;29(5 Suppl 15):3-10.
doi: 10.1053/sonc.2002.35526.

Oncosurgery: a new reality in metastatic colorectal carcinoma

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Review

Oncosurgery: a new reality in metastatic colorectal carcinoma

Clare Topham et al. Semin Oncol. 2002 Oct.

Abstract

Surgery is the only curative option for the treatment of liver metastases from colorectal cancer. However, fewer than 25% of hepatic metastases are suitable for resection and as many as 70% of these will recur. A variety of factors have been identified as significant predictors of long-term survival following hepatic resection, and improved surgical techniques such as cryosurgery, radiofrequency ablation, portal vein embolization, and two-stage hepatectomy have been developed to overcome some of the negative factors that contribute to poor prognosis. Whereas adjunctive 5-fluorouracil-based chemotherapy has had little impact on outcome, the new platinum derivative oxaliplatin added to 5-fluorouracil plus leucovorin has improved time-dependent parameters of efficacy and successfully downstaged the disease in some patients with unresectable metastases. In a recent study in 389 such patients, 151 of which had liver-only metastases, 51% treated with oxaliplatin became resectable with some patients achieving a complete histologic response. In another series of 95 initially unresectable patients who became resectable after treatment with oxaliplatin-based therapy, 41% were still alive after 4.2 years, with 64% of these being recurrence-free. Postoperative chemotherapeutic regimes have also been developed to eliminate residual disease after surgery; however, the advantage of preoperative chemotherapy is the potential to achieve a conversion from unresectability to resectability of hepatic metastases from primary colorectal cancer.

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