Preoperative High-resolution Magnetic Resonance Imaging Can Identify Good Prognosis Stage I, II, and III Rectal Cancer Best Managed by Surgery Alone
Croydon University Hospital · Basingstoke and North Hampshire Hospital · +2 more institutions
Abstract
The MERCURY study reported that high-resolution MRI can accurately stage rectal cancer. The routine policy in most centers involved in the MERCURY study was primary surgery alone in MRI-predicted stage II or less and in MRI “good prognosis” stage III with selective avoidance of neoadjuvant therapy. Patients and Methods: Data were collected prospectively on all patients included in the MERCURY study who were staged as MRI-defined “good” prognosis tumors. “Good” prognosis included MRI-predicted safe circumferential resection margins, with MRI-predicted T2/T3a/T3b (less than 5 mm spread from muscularis propria), regardless of MRI N stage. None received preoperative or postoperative radiotherapy. Overall survival, disease-free survival, and local recurrence were calculated.
Of 374 patients followed up in the MERCURY study, 122 (33%) were defined as “good prognosis” stage III or less on MRI. Overall and disease-free survival for all patients with MRI “good prognosis” stage I, II and III disease at 5 years was 68% and 85%, respectively. The local recurrence rate for this series of patients predicted to have a good prognosis tumor on MRI was 3%.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 19.30
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 0
Authors
9Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Magnetic resonance imaging
- Stage (stratigraphy)
- Radiology
- Colorectal cancer
- Radiation therapy
- Surgery
- Cancer
- Good health and well-being