AI Article Synopsis

  • A 55-year-old man diagnosed with Stage IV rectal cancer underwent surgery and post-operative chemotherapy.
  • His metastatic lymph nodes showed complete response to treatment, maintaining this for 18 months.
  • Five years later, after additional surgery for a new lymph node metastasis, he remains alive without cancer recurrence.

Article Abstract

A 55-year-old man with a positive fecal occult blood test visited our department, and after a thorough medical evaluation, was diagnosed with Stage IV Rs rectal cancer with marked para-aortic lymph node metastasis. In December 2007, the patient underwent low anterior rectal resection with D3 lymph node dissection, but the para-aortic lymph nodes were left. The metastatic lymph nodes showed a complete response(CR)to post-operative chemotherapy with FOLFOX, FOLFIRI, IRIS, and irinotecan+cetuximab, and the complete response was sustained for 18 months after surgery. Later, he developed Virchow's lymph node metastasis, which was also resected. At present, 5 years after the first surgery, the patient, whose chemotherapy has been discontinued, is alive without recurrence. It appears that using key drugs, such as 5-fluorouracil, leukovorin, oxaliplatin, irinotecan, and cetuximab, and performing aggressive salvage surgery for Virchow's lymph node recurrence, led to long-term recurrence-free survival.

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