THE SITUATION: With around 35.000 new cases per year and a 40% mortality rate, colorectal cancer is a real problem of health care in France. Chemotherapy for metastatic disease has completely changed during the ten last years with the emergence of promising new drugs such as oxaliplatin and irinotecan. Oral 5-FU prodrugs have also shown an interesting efficacy in this setting.
Results: Showed increased response rate, progression free survival with both drugs, and overall survival, only with the irinotecan-based regimen. Moreover, after aggressive first-line chemotherapy, some patients can undergo surgical resection of the metastases, initially considered as unresectable. We still do not know if these aggressive first-line therapies should be proposed to all metastatic patients or only to a selected subgroup. The best strategies remain to be evaluated.
In the setting of adjuvant chemotherapy: Of colorectal cancer, a 6-month 5-FU/folinic acid postoperative chemotherapy is actually the standard for the management of patients with positive lymph nodes (stage III). In stage II patients the benefit of such treatment remains controversial. The benefit of using oxaliplatin or irinotecan in association with 5-FU/folinic acid as adjuvant therapy is under investigation.
Conclusion: In this 21st century, chemotherapy has a major place in the therapeutic management of colorectal cancer patients.