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At Tata Memorial Hospital 50% of the patients present in the locally advanced stage which is technically unresectable, or that is beyond the realm of a potentially curative surgical resection. The evaluation of treatment approaches for these tumors is hampered by the absence of any substantial randomized studies and the heterogeneous nature of the tumors at presentation.
The management of these tumors has changed over the years, there is emphasis on neoadjuvant chemoradiation therapy, trying to convert a tumor that is initially unresectable to one that is potentially curable by surgery. But only 70-80% of the patients are able to complete this treatment without any significant treatment breaks.
Dose escalated treatment with radiotherapy in locally advanced and unresectable rectal cancers have been tried in many small series with good results and lesser toxicity.
Comparison outcome between the two arms will indicate the relative efficacy and toxicity of neoadjuvant concurrent chemoradiation vs boosted radiotherapy alone in downstaging of advanced cancers.
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Study methodology This is a phase II Randomised controlled study. Ninety cases of advanced rectal cancer (Stage II - Stage III) will be divided in two equal groups (Arm I & II) Arm-1(standard arm) - Patients will receive standard external radiation therapy to pelvis + concurrent chemotherapy with Tab Capecitabine. This will be followed by surgery at 6-8 weeks if deemed resectable.
Arm-2 (research arm) Patients in this group will not receive any neo-adjuvant chemotherapy, instead they will receive radiotherapy alone additional dose of localized radiotherapy boost. This will be followed by surgery at 6-8 weeks if deemed resectable.
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90 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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