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Response evaluation after neoadjuvant treatment for rectal cancer using modern MR imaging: a pictorial review.

Doenja M J Lambregts ,
Thierry N Boellaard ,
Regina G H Beets-Tan

Abstract

In recent years, neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy (CRT) has become the standard of care for patients with locally advanced rectal cancer. Until recently, patients routinely proceeded to surgical resection after CRT, regardless of the response. Nowadays, treatment is tailored depending on the response to chemoradiotherapy. In patients that respond very well to CRT, organ-preserving treatments such as watch-and-wait are increasingly considered as an alternative to surgery. To facilitate such personalized treatment planning, there is now an increased demand for more detailed radiological response evaluation after chemoradiation. MRI is one of the main tools used to assess response, but has difficulties in assessing response within areas of post-radiation fibrosis. Hence, MR sequences such as diffusion-weighted imaging are increasingly adopted in clinical MR protocols to improve the differentiation between tumor and fibrosis. In this pictorial review, we discuss the strengths and weaknesses of modern MR imaging, including functional imaging sequences such as diffusion-weighted MRI, for response evaluation after chemoradiation treatment and provide the main pearls and pitfalls for image interpretation.

More about this publication

Insights into imaging

Volume 10
Issue nr. 1
Pages 15
Publication date 13-02-2019

Full text links

Publisher website (DOI) 10.1186/s13244-019-0706-x
Europe PubMed Central 30758688
Pubmed 30758688

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