Smilow Shares: Colorectal Cancer - What You Need to Know and What's New
March 27, 2026March 26, 2026
Hosted by: Dr. Michael Cecchini
Presenters: Kimberly Johung, MD, PhD and Anne Mongiu, MD, PhD
About the speakers
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Transcript
- 00:04Hello, and thank you for
- 00:06joining us for the for
- 00:08the smile shares for colorectal
- 00:10cancer in twenty twenty six.
- 00:12This is colorectal cancer awareness
- 00:14month, and here at the
- 00:15Yale Smilow Cancer Hospital and
- 00:17the Yale Center for GI
- 00:18Cancers,
- 00:19we're gonna have a presentation,
- 00:21for
- 00:22GI medical oncology,
- 00:24surgical
- 00:25colorectal surgery,
- 00:26radiation oncology, and how we
- 00:28comprehensively
- 00:29care for patients with colorectal
- 00:31cancer.
- 00:32I'll start by,
- 00:34introducing each speaker,
- 00:37in each presentation,
- 00:38moderating
- 00:40a q and a session.
- 00:41So, again, my name is
- 00:42Michael Cecchini. I'm one of
- 00:43the GI medical oncologists and
- 00:45codirector of the colorectal cancer
- 00:46program and director of GI
- 00:47clinical research.
- 00:49I'd like to introduce my
- 00:50colleague, doctor Kim Joheng, one
- 00:52of the radiation oncologists. I'll
- 00:54let you introduce yourself.
- 00:57Thanks, Michael.
- 00:59Kim Joheng.
- 01:00I treat mostly GI cancers
- 01:02with radiation,
- 01:04and we'll be talking a
- 01:04little bit more about that,
- 01:06after Michael's talk.
- 01:09Doctor Anne Monju from Colorectal
- 01:11Surgery, who's also one of
- 01:12the codirectors of the colorectal
- 01:14cancer program.
- 01:16Hi. Anne Monju. I'm a
- 01:17colorectal surgeon here at Yale,
- 01:19and, my part of the
- 01:20team is to help with
- 01:21surgery to remove the cancer
- 01:23when the time is right.
- 01:26And so just some housekeeping,
- 01:28ish,
- 01:29topics. If you can put
- 01:31your questions in into the
- 01:32chat through the q and
- 01:33a, I will then repeat
- 01:35your questions,
- 01:36to the appropriate speaker.
- 01:38And I will be,
- 01:40starting off today talking about
- 01:42some of the medical oncology,
- 01:44aspects of colorectal cancer surgery.
- 01:46So I am going to
- 01:47share my screen here.
- 01:55Excellent.
- 01:56So,
- 01:58I've been going to talk
- 01:59about
- 02:00medical oncology management and personalized
- 02:02treatments for colorectal cancer,
- 02:04and here are my disclosures.
- 02:08I'm gonna talk a bit
- 02:08about staging, and then I'm
- 02:10gonna talk about how as
- 02:11medical oncologists,
- 02:13we think about some of
- 02:14the personalized treatments and chemotherapies,
- 02:16targeted therapies, systemic therapies, and
- 02:17even immunotherapies we use for
- 02:19these diseases.
- 02:21So how do we stage
- 02:23colorectal cancer?
- 02:25It's often made the diagnosis
- 02:27is often made, by colonoscopy,
- 02:30and then we have, the
- 02:32question of whether or not
- 02:33this is localized disease or
- 02:34metastatic disease.
- 02:35This will the this workup
- 02:37will often include some blood
- 02:38tests at first to assess
- 02:40some very
- 02:42straightforward
- 02:43measurements, such as liver function
- 02:45tests, blood counts like hemoglobin,
- 02:47white blood cell count, and
- 02:49as as well as a
- 02:50CEA, which is a blood
- 02:51marker that kind of gives
- 02:52us an indication
- 02:54of the presence,
- 02:56and and of colorectal cancer
- 02:58and sometimes whether or not
- 02:59that colorectal cancer is is
- 03:00worsening or or improving to
- 03:02our therapies.
- 03:04We also use a test,
- 03:05a sophisticated test at times
- 03:07called circulating tumor DNA. We
- 03:09typically use this test after
- 03:11surgery to to help determine
- 03:13whether or not there's any
- 03:14residual cancer left behind.
- 03:16There are many this is
- 03:17a very, detailed test,
- 03:19and is a lecture,
- 03:21to itself. But it's essentially
- 03:23a test that we can
- 03:24do after a surgery
- 03:25where we kind of find
- 03:26if there's any,
- 03:28evidence of DNA fragments of
- 03:30residual cancer floating around in
- 03:31the bloodstream. And we can
- 03:32tell that those DNA fragments,
- 03:35apart from normal DNA in
- 03:36our blood.
- 03:38And if they're present, it
- 03:39really suggests that there is
- 03:40residual cancer.
- 03:42And then also, we will
- 03:43always do a CT scan
- 03:45to to identify whether or
- 03:46not there's any spread
- 03:48of a cancer,
- 03:49micrometastases,
- 03:51or small areas of metastases.
- 03:53We're looking for any evidence
- 03:55the cancer may have spread
- 03:56to the liver,
- 03:58the abdominal cavity, or the
- 04:00lungs would be the three
- 04:01most common,
- 04:02sites.
- 04:05So we are also sometimes
- 04:07doing surgery even when this
- 04:08cancer has spread. And so
- 04:10we call it we call,
- 04:12limited spread of the disease
- 04:14oligometastatic
- 04:15disease,
- 04:16typically meaning it's gone to
- 04:17one organ, sometimes even multiple
- 04:19sites in in the organ.
- 04:21The definition for this is
- 04:23varied,
- 04:24depending on, depending on what,
- 04:26what guideline you follow. But
- 04:28the the the overall term
- 04:30oligometastatic
- 04:31disease means limited metastatic disease.
- 04:33So despite the cancer having
- 04:35spread, it hasn't spread,
- 04:37as,
- 04:38as much as,
- 04:41other
- 04:42other other instances. And and
- 04:43usually with oligometastatic disease, our
- 04:45goal is to address the
- 04:47disease with more than just
- 04:48surgery. So if we think
- 04:49about a colon tumor, the
- 04:50most con colorectal
- 04:52tumor, the most common site
- 04:53that that may spread to
- 04:55would be the liver. And
- 04:56once it's spread to the
- 04:57liver or the lung or
- 04:58the abdominal cavity,
- 05:00by definition, it is stage
- 05:01four disease. It is it
- 05:02is broken out of the
- 05:04colon and the lymph nodes
- 05:05in that area and and
- 05:06spread to other organs.
- 05:09Whereas a cancer that's that's
- 05:11only spread to a lymph
- 05:12node but not distantly would
- 05:13be a stage three disease,
- 05:14and cancers that have more
- 05:16minorly invaded into the wall
- 05:17of the colon but not
- 05:18spread to any lymph nodes
- 05:19or distantly
- 05:20would be a stage two
- 05:22disease, and and minimal
- 05:23invasion into the colon wall
- 05:25might be a stage one
- 05:25tumor.
- 05:27And so one of the
- 05:28first questions we have, as
- 05:30a group in our multidisciplinary
- 05:32tumor boards when we see
- 05:34somebody diagnosed with ole comatostatic
- 05:36diseases, does this patient still
- 05:37have a pathway to cure?
- 05:39And we work together
- 05:40to usually use some combination
- 05:42of chemotherapy,
- 05:43radiation,
- 05:44and surgery to maybe,
- 05:47completely remove and eliminate all
- 05:49the cancer. And, here's an
- 05:50example.
- 05:51So this is a CAT
- 05:52scan. And in this CAT
- 05:54scan,
- 05:55we're looking up from this
- 05:56patient's feet. So,
- 05:58if we if, if that's
- 06:00the case, this would be
- 06:00the right side of the
- 06:01patient,
- 06:02with my cursor. So left
- 06:04side of the screen, right
- 06:04side of the patient. Left,
- 06:07the the this would be
- 06:09the left side of the
- 06:10patient. This is the back.
- 06:11So you can see the
- 06:12spinal bone, one of these
- 06:13vertebral bones right there, and
- 06:15the chest,
- 06:16at the top of the
- 06:17screen. And this patient's laying
- 06:19on their back. We're looking
- 06:20up up from their feet,
- 06:22and they're sliced like a
- 06:23loaf of bread, and this
- 06:24is one of those slices.
- 06:25So this big gray area
- 06:27would be the liver, and
- 06:28in it is a a
- 06:29tumor there that you can
- 06:30see that I'm, running the
- 06:32cursor around right there. So
- 06:34this is an isolated,
- 06:36isolated frame of the CAT
- 06:37scan, but this was an
- 06:38isolated,
- 06:39disease,
- 06:41that was
- 06:42able to be removed by
- 06:44surgery.
- 06:45On the other hand, here's
- 06:46another example. Same orientation,
- 06:48right side,
- 06:49left side,
- 06:51chest, back. But we can
- 06:52see here this this patient's
- 06:53liver, unfortunately, has numerous cancers,
- 06:56and it's not so much
- 06:57a oligometastatic
- 06:58disease that we,
- 06:59are optimistic upfront that we
- 07:01can get that patient,
- 07:02get all that,
- 07:04all all those tumors removed.
- 07:05But perhaps with the combination
- 07:07of chemotherapy
- 07:08and potentially other treatments, we
- 07:09can shrink down those tumors
- 07:10enough to change the the
- 07:12scenario there and get that
- 07:13patient to surgery.
- 07:16One of the other things
- 07:17that we we know and
- 07:19and try and subtype the
- 07:20cancer a bit differently is
- 07:22that there's a difference between
- 07:23tumors that arise on the
- 07:24left side of the colon,
- 07:26which is, again, your right,
- 07:29or the right side of
- 07:30the colon, which would be
- 07:30your left because this is
- 07:32a a diagram of looking
- 07:33straight at somebody's colon. So
- 07:34this would be the start
- 07:36of the colon,
- 07:37as stool moves, follows this
- 07:39path and ultimately ends up
- 07:40in the rectum and then
- 07:41is x-rayed through the anus.
- 07:43So we've, we've,
- 07:45identified as a field that
- 07:47when we find a tumor
- 07:48in the right side of
- 07:49the colon
- 07:50and versus the left side
- 07:51of the colon and we
- 07:52sequence that that cancer to
- 07:54find out what mutations are
- 07:55present in the cancer or
- 07:57look at different methylation profiles,
- 07:58which are other DNA changes
- 08:00in the tumor,
- 08:01we find that they're very
- 08:02different cancers. And the reason
- 08:04is,
- 08:05they the the tissue that
- 08:07the, the normal colon
- 08:11comes from different embryological origin
- 08:13cells as our bodies are
- 08:14forming. And this leads to
- 08:16just different behaviors of, of
- 08:18these normal cells that can
- 08:19ultimately
- 08:20develop into cancer. And this
- 08:22helps me as a medical
- 08:23oncologist
- 08:24realize that,
- 08:25there are different treatments to
- 08:27use,
- 08:28or certain tests to do
- 08:30to identify
- 08:31the nuances,
- 08:32that may be present for
- 08:33the to to establish the
- 08:34differences of those tumors. There
- 08:36is also some differences in
- 08:38how these cancers may even
- 08:39spread. So we find that
- 08:41these cancers on the right
- 08:42side tend to more be
- 08:43more likely to have a
- 08:44BRAF mutation, which is a
- 08:45targetable mutation,
- 08:46to be more likely to
- 08:47be MSI high, which means
- 08:49immunotherapy may be indicated,
- 08:51when the when the cancer
- 08:53has spread.
- 08:55And whereas the cancers on
- 08:56the left side are less
- 08:56likely to have those mutations,
- 08:58and we can use other
- 08:59targeted therapies for those tumors
- 09:00such as panatumumab, of course,
- 09:02it talks about.
- 09:04So from a biological perspective,
- 09:07we think of,
- 09:08colon cancer as arising
- 09:10through a process called the,
- 09:12adenoma to carcinoma sequence,
- 09:15where we we start with
- 09:17a normal,
- 09:18a normal intestinal, what we
- 09:20call epithelium,
- 09:21normal intestinal lining. And what
- 09:23can happen over time is
- 09:25polyps form through the disruption
- 09:27of this normal lining, a
- 09:28normal epithelium.
- 09:29And so then you get
- 09:30a small polyp and then
- 09:32a large polyp. And along
- 09:33those way along the way,
- 09:35these cells can start to
- 09:36have some abnormalities
- 09:37and accumulate
- 09:39mutations,
- 09:40which lead these tumor cells
- 09:41to become dysregulated,
- 09:43invasive,
- 09:44and and ultimately,
- 09:46if they're invasive, become cancerous
- 09:48cells. And that's that's essentially
- 09:50how this whole process, proceeds
- 09:52in in most tumors are
- 09:53formed.
- 09:55And that the, the the
- 09:56typical time frame this takes
- 09:58is on the order of
- 09:59years, which is why we
- 10:00do colonoscopies,
- 10:02in,
- 10:03every ten years for patients
- 10:04that are are standard risk.
- 10:07Now for medical oncologists, we
- 10:09do,
- 10:10we do quite extensive tumor
- 10:12profiling to determine what are
- 10:14the best therapies we should
- 10:15be offering our patients. So
- 10:17we do some testing, which
- 10:18is called immunohistochemistry,
- 10:20which means we stain the
- 10:21tumor tissue.
- 10:23I should say, we order
- 10:24this testing. Our our our
- 10:25pathologists do this.
- 10:27But we order immunohistochemistry
- 10:29testing,
- 10:30which means the tissue is
- 10:31stained and it's looked at
- 10:32under a microscope by the
- 10:33pathologist to see the presence
- 10:34or absence
- 10:35of of certain proteins. And
- 10:37some examples would be looking
- 10:38for mismatch repair proteins. That's
- 10:40trying to identify whether or
- 10:41not a tumor is MSI
- 10:42high and therefore sensitive to
- 10:44immunotherapy.
- 10:45Or maybe looking at HER2,
- 10:46which is a different protein,
- 10:48and there are targeted therapies
- 10:49for that. And and we
- 10:50then we also sequence the
- 10:52DNA of of virtually all
- 10:53tumors now,
- 10:54and try and identify whether
- 10:56mutations in KRAS, BRAF,
- 10:59or or other,
- 11:00alterations are present because we
- 11:01have targeted therapies for these
- 11:03these these scenarios.
- 11:06And so a biopsy may
- 11:07be used again,
- 11:08from a a lung biopsy
- 11:10if this cancer is spread
- 11:11to the lung and then
- 11:13stained for some of these
- 11:14immunohistochemistry
- 11:15tests. We can even do
- 11:16liquid biopsies now. So we
- 11:18don't even need to always
- 11:19biopsy the tumor and sequence
- 11:20the tumor. Sometimes we can
- 11:21just get those little DNA
- 11:23fragments from the blood and
- 11:24sequence those and be confident
- 11:26that there's a KRAS mutation
- 11:27or the or a KRAS
- 11:28mutation is absent. So it's
- 11:30absolutely standard of care,
- 11:32everywhere and certainly at Yale.
- 11:33We'd be doing all of
- 11:35the testing that's here on
- 11:36this page, testing the DNA,
- 11:37testing the tissue to personalize
- 11:39the treatment and make sure
- 11:40we're offering our patients the
- 11:41most effective therapy.
- 11:43So these are the the
- 11:44tests that I advocate that,
- 11:47that, all of my patients
- 11:49should know the results from,
- 11:51to make sure that they're
- 11:52getting,
- 11:54the most effective,
- 11:55therapies. And and we need
- 11:57every last detail here to
- 11:58be confident that we're actually
- 11:59giving the right drug to
- 12:00the right patient at the
- 12:01right time. So we need
- 12:02to know the microsatellite
- 12:03state
- 12:04status. And for patients that
- 12:07are
- 12:08metastatic when the tumors
- 12:11metastasized,
- 12:12most of those tumors are
- 12:13going to be met microsatellite
- 12:14stable. So ninety six percent
- 12:16of the time, we find
- 12:17that tumors are microsatellite stable,
- 12:19which means at present, there's
- 12:20not a large role for
- 12:21immunotherapy.
- 12:23But for these,
- 12:24two to four percent of
- 12:25patients that are diagnosed with
- 12:26microsatellite instability high tumors or
- 12:28MSI high tumors, immunotherapy
- 12:31is is,
- 12:34the main treatment we're using
- 12:35for these patients, and it's
- 12:36highly effective. So this is
- 12:38a can't miss kind of
- 12:39marker that we need to
- 12:40test all of our patients
- 12:41for. And then we also
- 12:43now need to know about
- 12:43KRAS mutations.
- 12:45Is it present or is
- 12:46it not? What is the
- 12:47KRAS mutation? If it's present,
- 12:49we may have drugs that
- 12:50target that KRAS mutation. If
- 12:51it's absent, that gives me
- 12:52insights
- 12:54about using specific therapies.
- 12:56And then the BRAF v
- 12:57six hundred e mutation, which
- 12:58historically has been a very
- 12:59aggressive mutation, but we have
- 13:02targeted therapies for this in
- 13:03there. It's important they're instituted
- 13:05early, and we we know
- 13:06that there's great data that
- 13:08backs that up,
- 13:09as well as HER2 status
- 13:10that gives us,
- 13:13insights about using HER2 targeted
- 13:15therapies. And lastly, again, the
- 13:17sightedness. I need all five
- 13:19of these,
- 13:21these details for every patient
- 13:22I see, every new patient
- 13:24I see, every established patient
- 13:25I see, and make sure
- 13:26they're getting the right treatment,
- 13:28the right drug for the
- 13:28right patient at the right
- 13:29time. So I encourage my
- 13:31patients to be empowered that
- 13:33that this is this is
- 13:34information,
- 13:35that they they should be
- 13:36requesting if if it's not
- 13:38done for some reason.
- 13:40So we initially, we're typically
- 13:41using chemotherapy, FOLFOX,
- 13:44FOLFIRI, FOLFOXURI
- 13:45sometimes. These are chemotherapies.
- 13:47They're not targeted. We use
- 13:48five fluorouracil,
- 13:49which is a a drug
- 13:51we deliver through a five
- 13:52of fusion
- 13:53pump over forty six hours.
- 13:54We use oxaliplatin
- 13:56given along with that,
- 13:58and or or folfury,
- 14:01five of fluoroeracil with our
- 14:02Inatecan.
- 14:04These are the initial chemotherapies
- 14:05we'll start with for most
- 14:06patients.
- 14:07We'll often add on a
- 14:08drug on top of them,
- 14:10called either bevacizumab
- 14:11or panetumab and cetuximab. And
- 14:13these and and which what
- 14:15what we add in the
- 14:16red here depends on
- 14:18what mutations are present.
- 14:20And, also, again, we'll add
- 14:21on, a BRAF inhibitor if
- 14:23a BRAF b six hundred
- 14:24e mutation is present. Again,
- 14:26why we need to know
- 14:27all these little details is
- 14:28because we personalize each treatment
- 14:31to each patient to make
- 14:32sure we're being as effective
- 14:33as
- 14:34possible,
- 14:35towards the patient. And so
- 14:37I'm gonna just show a
- 14:38couple slides about how these
- 14:40drugs work, how targeted drugs
- 14:41work. So if we think
- 14:43about a cancers,
- 14:44cancer cell, this would be,
- 14:46the membrane or the outside
- 14:48of a cancer cell, and
- 14:49and below here would be,
- 14:50like, the inside, and the
- 14:51nucleus would be, like, the
- 14:52brain of the cancer cell.
- 14:54Cancer cells, unfortunately,
- 14:56often have a lot of
- 14:57active signaling, and that stimulates
- 14:59growth. So whereas the all
- 15:01these arrows is just kind
- 15:02of a, like a light
- 15:03switch on or a waterfall
- 15:04on into the brain of
- 15:05the cell telling it to
- 15:06grow. And when we can
- 15:07shut that process down, we
- 15:09can, kill cancer cells. We
- 15:11can certainly slow growth quite
- 15:12effectively. And
- 15:14the idea is to target
- 15:15the cancer cells that have
- 15:16this all activated and spare
- 15:18the normal cells, whereas chemotherapy
- 15:20is more poison oriented and
- 15:22and is not so focused
- 15:23on,
- 15:24specific pathways. So we know
- 15:26when when a KRAS mutation
- 15:28is present, if we can,
- 15:30if we can,
- 15:32target it, we can shut
- 15:33down this pathway. And we
- 15:35know that when there's no
- 15:36KRAS mutation present, we can
- 15:38we can,
- 15:39target these receptors with eGFR
- 15:41inhibitors,
- 15:42lcetuximab
- 15:43or pantetumumab,
- 15:45and,
- 15:47and that that adds to,
- 15:48how well patients do, how
- 15:50often the cancer shrinks down,
- 15:51how long patients,
- 15:52they're disease controlled. Whereas if
- 15:54there's,
- 15:56a mutation present at KRAS
- 15:57BRAF, we know that targeting
- 15:59these receptors up here,
- 16:01are less is less impactful
- 16:02when we use a drug
- 16:03like bevacizumab,
- 16:04which is why I need
- 16:05to know, again, whether or
- 16:06not a KRAS mutation or
- 16:08a BRAF mutation is present
- 16:09right away.
- 16:11Now we have
- 16:13we have drugs that inhibit
- 16:15specific KRAS mutations. So if
- 16:16you have a KRAS g
- 16:17twelve c, there's FDA approved
- 16:19drugs,
- 16:20that,
- 16:22that,
- 16:24that target that. If there's
- 16:25a KRAS g twelve d
- 16:27mutation, there's numerous clinical trials
- 16:28looking at g twelve b
- 16:30and so on. So these
- 16:31are targetable mutations with approved
- 16:32drugs and many clinical trials
- 16:34that may be relevant for
- 16:35to know this information.
- 16:37Whereas, if there's a BRAF
- 16:38mutation present, we have,
- 16:41a BRAF inhibitor called encorafenib
- 16:43and cetuximab. So we wanna
- 16:44shut the we wanna shut
- 16:46that growth pattern down right
- 16:47at its source, right at
- 16:48the BRAF mutation. And we
- 16:49know you the the recent
- 16:50approval of these drugs within
- 16:52the the last year literally
- 16:53doubled the survival
- 16:55for for for, patients with
- 16:57BRAF mutations.
- 17:00There's similar targeted treatments if
- 17:02there's abnormalities in HER2 on
- 17:04the cell surface, something called
- 17:05tucatinibetrizumab.
- 17:07Again, why we need to
- 17:08know the details of personalizing
- 17:10these treatments as well as
- 17:11in HER2 for HER2 positive
- 17:13colorectal cancer.
- 17:14And and then
- 17:16to conclude talking about some
- 17:18of these more targeted based
- 17:19treatments is immunotherapy.
- 17:21So for that two to
- 17:22four percent of patients that
- 17:23have metastatic
- 17:25disease but have MSI high
- 17:27tumors, we know that,
- 17:28they're highly sensitive
- 17:30to immunotherapy because the tumors
- 17:32have many mutations.
- 17:34And therefore,
- 17:35the immune system, given enough
- 17:37push by our immune therapies,
- 17:39has an easier time
- 17:41recognizing the cancer as foreign
- 17:43and,
- 17:45and,
- 17:47can eliminate it. So
- 17:49this is,
- 17:50this is some results on
- 17:52the left here from our
- 17:53initial
- 17:54trial with immunotherapy comparing it
- 17:56to chemo chemotherapy
- 17:57for these patients
- 17:58with MSI high colorectal cancer.
- 18:00And we saw that, again,
- 18:02on
- 18:03as time progressed,
- 18:04more patients on pembrolizumab,
- 18:06an anti PD one inhibitor
- 18:08in immunotherapy,
- 18:09had not had their cancer
- 18:11grow and and and were
- 18:13alive compared to those that
- 18:14got chemotherapy. The majority of
- 18:16those patients at some point,
- 18:17for example, here at two
- 18:18years, had had their had
- 18:19their cancer progressing and and
- 18:21grow. Whereas on on pembrolizumab,
- 18:24roughly half of those patients
- 18:26were still stable.
- 18:27Now with,
- 18:29two immune drugs, we're we're
- 18:31seeing at the two year
- 18:32mark here,
- 18:34that,
- 18:35roughly at two years,
- 18:37seventy ish percent of patients
- 18:39have not had their cancer
- 18:40progressed. So we are, literally
- 18:42probably curing,
- 18:45more than half of the
- 18:46patients by giving them
- 18:48ipi and nivo, ipilimumab and
- 18:50nivolumab with MSI hypoalleric cancer.
- 18:53A rare subtype, but this
- 18:54is something we can't miss
- 18:55because the results can be
- 18:56so impact.
- 18:57So in conclusion, we need
- 18:59multidisciplinary
- 19:00care for all patients to
- 19:01determine the optimal care plan
- 19:02whether or not we can
- 19:03do surgery.
- 19:04We still use our traditional
- 19:06chemotherapies for the majority of
- 19:08patients, but all tumors need
- 19:10testing for microsatellite
- 19:11status, ARAF status, BRAF status,
- 19:13HER2 status, as well as
- 19:15sidedness,
- 19:16to make sure we're giving
- 19:17the optimal results. And I
- 19:18think patients should be empowered
- 19:20to, to to know the
- 19:21status piece.
- 19:22And, immunotherapy
- 19:23is is, you know, making
- 19:25some,
- 19:27big impacts for patients with
- 19:28MSI high disease.
- 19:30So I'll stop there,
- 19:32and,
- 19:34if there are questions,
- 19:36I will,
- 19:38answer them throughout the,
- 19:40the presentations, but I'm gonna
- 19:42pivot now to doctor Jo
- 19:43Hong to discuss radiation oncology.
- 19:53We're muted. Sorry. I'm here
- 19:55now. Thanks, doctor Cicchini.
- 19:57So I'm gonna be talking
- 19:59about this is a very
- 20:00similar title to doctor Cicchini's
- 20:01title, A Personalized Approach to
- 20:03Radiation Therapy,
- 20:05for Rectal Cancer.
- 20:07So as shown here, there's
- 20:08three main modalities for treatment
- 20:10of rectal cancer,
- 20:12represented today actually on our
- 20:13webinar. So this is what
- 20:14doctor Cicchini does. He delivers
- 20:16the systemic therapies, either chemotherapy,
- 20:19or some of the targeted
- 20:20agents or immunotherapy that you
- 20:21heard about.
- 20:23This is doctor Maggio's area
- 20:24of expertise removing your actual
- 20:26tumor. So she's the hero
- 20:28there.
- 20:28And this is what I
- 20:29do, radiation therapy, which is
- 20:31a little more foreign to
- 20:32people. So I thought I
- 20:33would start talking first a
- 20:35little bit about the radiation
- 20:36care path. How does radiation
- 20:38work?
- 20:39And then we'll talk about
- 20:40two different ways we can
- 20:41deliver radiation,
- 20:43when you might be able
- 20:43to avoid radiation,
- 20:45specific scenarios for that,
- 20:48certain scenarios where you might
- 20:49have an excellent response to
- 20:51the chemo and the radiation,
- 20:52and you might not need
- 20:53the surgery.
- 20:55And then I'll touch upon
- 20:56what doctor Chiquini was mentioning
- 20:58was the oligometastatic
- 20:59state or when your cancer
- 21:01really has spread but only
- 21:02to limited sites and where
- 21:04radiation might come into play
- 21:06in that scenario.
- 21:08So a little bit of
- 21:08a,
- 21:10short radio biology lecture, which
- 21:12is basically how does radiation
- 21:13work to kill cancer cells.
- 21:15So radiation therapy really is
- 21:17relying on the use of
- 21:18ionizing radiation
- 21:20directed at cancer cells. It's
- 21:22delivered by these big machines
- 21:23called LINACS,
- 21:25really directing radiation with high
- 21:27precision,
- 21:28at your tumor.
- 21:29And what the radiation is
- 21:31doing is causing damage in
- 21:33the DNA of your cancer
- 21:34cells. I like to think
- 21:35of these as kinda like
- 21:36the building blocks of your
- 21:37cancer cells. And so if
- 21:38we use radiation to damage
- 21:40the DNA when the cells
- 21:41try to divide and multiply,
- 21:44they realize they're damaged and
- 21:45they die off instead. But
- 21:46we think of this as
- 21:47a local therapy because I'm
- 21:48really targeting the tumors,
- 21:50that I can see on
- 21:51your on your scans, whether
- 21:53it's CAT scan or MRI.
- 21:55This is an example of
- 21:56the treatment delivery machine and
- 21:58the treatment delivery room.
- 22:00So the radiation is coming
- 22:01from the head of the
- 22:02Linac here. We have panels
- 22:04on either side that are
- 22:05really imaging panels that help
- 22:07make sure that your body
- 22:08is in, the exact right
- 22:10position for treatment. So we
- 22:11can either do CAT scans,
- 22:13or X-ray imaging really to
- 22:15make sure that you you
- 22:16are accurately positioned for treatment
- 22:18on a day to day
- 22:19basis.
- 22:21And in order to spare
- 22:22the healthy tissue,
- 22:24the radiation is actually delivered
- 22:26from all angles. So this
- 22:27machine will spin around you.
- 22:29And so if beams are
- 22:30coming from different angles,
- 22:32it's really the intersection point
- 22:34that gets the full dose
- 22:35of radiation, and the tissues
- 22:37that the beams are passing
- 22:38through will get a much
- 22:40lower dose of radiation.
- 22:42And we use this this
- 22:43is kind of what it
- 22:44looks like if you were
- 22:45to look up in the
- 22:46head of the machine. So
- 22:47there's these tungsten leaves. They
- 22:49look really big in this
- 22:50picture, but they're actually just
- 22:51a couple of millimeters thick.
- 22:53And what they do is
- 22:54they're gonna be moving around
- 22:56during treatment with the shape
- 22:58of that field,
- 23:00matching kind of the shape
- 23:01of your tumor target from
- 23:02that angle. What they also
- 23:04do is they will move
- 23:05in and out of the
- 23:06field during treatment, and that
- 23:08can,
- 23:09modulate the intensity of the
- 23:11radiation beam.
- 23:12And that allows us to
- 23:14deposit this dose of radiation
- 23:16in your body that fits
- 23:17kind of a three-dimensional
- 23:18shape that matches the three-dimensional
- 23:21shape of your tumor. So
- 23:22these are just a little
- 23:23bit of the technical aspects
- 23:24of how we are able
- 23:25to safely deliver tumor,
- 23:27radiation to your tumor and
- 23:29avoid,
- 23:30radiation dose elsewhere in the
- 23:32tissues.
- 23:33A little bit about what
- 23:35it involves to get a
- 23:36course of radiation completed. So,
- 23:38obviously, there's a consultation process
- 23:40where we meet you and
- 23:41talk to you about the
- 23:42indications for radiation and what
- 23:43you can expect.
- 23:45And then we have all
- 23:45these weird terms, and so
- 23:47I go through them if
- 23:47you were to embark on
- 23:48a course of radiation,
- 23:50we start with what we
- 23:51call is is a simulation,
- 23:52and I would think of
- 23:53that as a planning process.
- 23:54So we're gonna get your
- 23:55body in position
- 23:57for treatment, and then we
- 23:58need to scan your,
- 24:00tumor region
- 24:01in that position so that
- 24:03we can see where the
- 24:04tumor targets lie when your
- 24:05body's in position for radiation.
- 24:07Most often, we place rectal
- 24:08cancer patients,
- 24:10prone, so on your belly,
- 24:12for treatment. And what this
- 24:13does is that it allows,
- 24:15the healthy bowel to kind
- 24:17of fall forward and away,
- 24:19from the treatment area so
- 24:20we deliver less radiation to
- 24:22the healthy bowel. I like
- 24:23to think of this as
- 24:24a nice massage table,
- 24:26pillow where you have the
- 24:27hole for your face here
- 24:28and you're comfortably positioned.
- 24:31After the CT scan process,
- 24:33we work with,
- 24:35physicists who are called dosimetrists.
- 24:36What they're doing is they're
- 24:38helping us, you know, angle
- 24:40the beams and devise a
- 24:41computer pace,
- 24:42based plan to deliver radiation
- 24:44that sort of really tightly
- 24:46fits the tumor targets. There's
- 24:48kind of a physics QA
- 24:49process, and then you embark
- 24:50on treatment,
- 24:52which tends to be daily
- 24:53treatments, and we'll talk about
- 24:54the reason for that shortly.
- 24:56This is just an example
- 24:57of what treatment planning looks
- 24:59like. So we've identified on
- 25:01a slice of a scan
- 25:02kind of the nodal lymph
- 25:04node regions that are at
- 25:05risk, and this is what
- 25:06a plan would look like
- 25:07showing the distribution of the
- 25:09radiation dose to those lymph
- 25:10node regions,
- 25:11but kind of carving the
- 25:12dose away from what I'm
- 25:14showing up here with the
- 25:15cursor is healthy bowel in
- 25:17the middle of those lymph
- 25:18node regions.
- 25:20I mentioned that radiation is
- 25:22typically delivered on a daily
- 25:23basis, Monday through Fridays.
- 25:25The reason for breaking the
- 25:27radiation dose into these,
- 25:29daily smaller doses,
- 25:31is that cancer cells have
- 25:33a decreased ability to repair,
- 25:36the damage, to their DNA
- 25:38from radiation, whereas healthy tissues
- 25:40are more able to repair,
- 25:42the damage from the radiation.
- 25:43So we break out the
- 25:44dose into little doses. The
- 25:46healthy tissues are repairing, whereas
- 25:48the cancer cells are less
- 25:49likely to repair.
- 25:50And then that's how we
- 25:51get cancer kill over time
- 25:53without wreaking too much havoc
- 25:54on the healthy tissues.
- 25:56So when would radiation be
- 25:58part of your treatment plan
- 25:59for rectal cancer treatment? So,
- 26:01doctor Cicchini mentioned a little
- 26:03bit about the staging of
- 26:04rectal cancer. And, like all
- 26:06things for cancer treatment, the,
- 26:08determination of when to employ
- 26:10radiation depends on the stage
- 26:12of your tumor.
- 26:13Part of that is how
- 26:14deep the tumor extends into
- 26:15the wall of the rectum.
- 26:17So we usually get involved
- 26:18for the deeper tumors, the
- 26:20t three category or the
- 26:21t four category,
- 26:23and then whether or not
- 26:24your tumor has spread to
- 26:25nearby lymph nodes,
- 26:27and we are typically involved
- 26:28if there's evidence,
- 26:30of cancer involving the lymph
- 26:32nodes,
- 26:33around the rectal area.
- 26:36This is just
- 26:38a a couple of graphs
- 26:39to show you, what is
- 26:41the benefit of using radiation
- 26:42for rectal cancer. So an
- 26:44example from kind of two
- 26:45classic trials showing you that
- 26:47when we add radiation to
- 26:49surgery, the benefit is what
- 26:51we call local control or
- 26:53preventing the cancer from being
- 26:54able to grow back. So
- 26:55the cancers are gonna recur
- 26:57locally in the pelvis,
- 26:59more often if you, have
- 27:01surgery alone. But when you
- 27:03add in radiation, we can
- 27:04reduce that likelihood of recurrence.
- 27:07And this is just showing
- 27:08you that if you apply
- 27:09the radiation
- 27:10before or after surgery,
- 27:12it's actually more effective
- 27:14before surgery. And in part,
- 27:15some of that is that
- 27:16we have a target that
- 27:17we can clearly see, and
- 27:18we're not kind of treating
- 27:19the space where the tumor
- 27:21used to be.
- 27:22In those two trials that
- 27:24I mentioned in the previous
- 27:25slide, the radiation was delivered
- 27:27in very different ways.
- 27:28So the first trial was
- 27:30delivering radiation in these five
- 27:32larger treatments
- 27:33without chemotherapy.
- 27:35And the second version was
- 27:36delivering radiation in daily doses,
- 27:39Mondays through Fridays over the
- 27:40course of five and a
- 27:41half weeks.
- 27:42And that's given with a
- 27:44light dose of chemotherapy that
- 27:45kinda synergizes with the radiation.
- 27:49So these are two, you
- 27:50know, quite distinct ways of
- 27:52giving radiation. So how do
- 27:53we choose between one or
- 27:54the other?
- 27:55I'll start by saying that,
- 27:57in the US, the long
- 27:59course of radiation over five
- 28:01and a half weeks is
- 28:02more commonly used just by
- 28:03practice patterns.
- 28:05The shorter course of radiation
- 28:06is more commonly used in
- 28:07Europe.
- 28:08But if we look at
- 28:09data comparing the two approaches,
- 28:12so the different colors,
- 28:13on these graphs are just
- 28:15patients who either receive the
- 28:16short course of radiation or
- 28:18the longer course and what
- 28:19is their,
- 28:20overall survival after cancer treatment.
- 28:23The bottom line is that
- 28:25in general,
- 28:26survival and rates of local
- 28:28recurrence are the same if
- 28:29you deliver radiation in these
- 28:30two ways. So as a
- 28:32patient, I would say, well,
- 28:33I want the faster way,
- 28:34and I don't want a
- 28:34chemo pill. So why don't
- 28:35we just do the five
- 28:36treatments and and be done
- 28:37with it? So we get
- 28:39a little more nuanced with
- 28:40it. One of the analyses
- 28:42shows that if you have
- 28:43a cancer that is lower
- 28:44down in the rectum, so
- 28:46quite close to the anus
- 28:47and, you know, a benchmark
- 28:49that over a threshold we
- 28:50use is about five centimeters
- 28:51from the anus,
- 28:53in that particular population of
- 28:54patients. And maybe doctor Manjo
- 28:56can touch upon this. Oftentimes,
- 28:58the surgery can be more
- 28:59complex. And so in that
- 29:01situation,
- 29:02you know, shrinking the tumor,
- 29:04if you will, with radiation
- 29:05first,
- 29:06can can lead to,
- 29:08more successful surgery and less
- 29:10likelihood that there's residual tumor
- 29:12that may grow back after
- 29:13surgery. So I think that
- 29:14would be one of the
- 29:15instances for sure where we're
- 29:17considering,
- 29:18a longer course of radiation
- 29:19rather than the short course.
- 29:21And then this is a
- 29:22really complicated slide just to
- 29:23show you, that in a
- 29:25trial that, the difference between
- 29:27the two treatment,
- 29:29pathways,
- 29:30one of the differences was
- 29:31that some of the patients
- 29:32had the short course radiation
- 29:33and some had the long
- 29:34course radiation.
- 29:35This trial was also looking
- 29:37at other things, like having
- 29:38chemo before surgery versus chemo
- 29:40after surgery.
- 29:42We now use the chemo
- 29:44before surgery in most cases
- 29:45because of some studies showing,
- 29:47you know, survival benefits to
- 29:48that. But what I want
- 29:50to point out from this
- 29:51trial is that if it
- 29:52is a way to compare
- 29:53the shorter course and the
- 29:54longer course.
- 29:56And this particular trial involved
- 29:58patients with really much more
- 29:59advanced tumors,
- 30:01meaning the t fours deeper
- 30:02in the rectum,
- 30:03those with n two disease,
- 30:05so a lot more lymph
- 30:06node involvement, and then these
- 30:07other more technical kind of
- 30:09risk factors that we look
- 30:10at as a team.
- 30:12And in these kind of
- 30:13higher risk patients,
- 30:15when we compare the two
- 30:16arms, the patients that received
- 30:18the shorter course radiation
- 30:20actually had a higher risk
- 30:22of local recurrence in the
- 30:23pelvis at about ten percent,
- 30:26versus more like, you know,
- 30:27six percent with the longer
- 30:28course.
- 30:29So, again, I think if
- 30:30you have a more advanced
- 30:31tumor, we certainly want to
- 30:33be proceeding
- 30:34with the longer course of
- 30:35radiation,
- 30:38for for this reason,
- 30:39and this trial supporting that.
- 30:41So just kind of a
- 30:42summary of that is that,
- 30:44we definitely prefer the longer
- 30:46course radiation for tumors that
- 30:47are low close to the
- 30:49anus,
- 30:50for tumors with these higher
- 30:51risk factors like the t
- 30:53four tumors or a lot
- 30:54of lymph node involve involvement.
- 30:57Another scenario would be if
- 30:58we wanna really maximize local
- 31:00control because we're thinking about
- 31:01maybe trying to avoid surgery,
- 31:03and I'll talk about that
- 31:04in the next few slides.
- 31:05But that the short course,
- 31:07we can consider for patients
- 31:08who have,
- 31:09less advanced tumors that are
- 31:11not getting close to kind
- 31:12of the edge of where
- 31:13doctor Maggio would be cutting
- 31:15for surgery,
- 31:16and tumors that are not
- 31:18really low in the rectum.
- 31:19And so we use this
- 31:20for select patients, but I
- 31:22think really default more to
- 31:23the longer course radiation with
- 31:25the chemo pill.
- 31:26How else can we individualize
- 31:28treatment, and the use of
- 31:30radiation? So we know that
- 31:31rectal surgery obviously is gonna
- 31:33affect your bowel function,
- 31:35and also that the combination
- 31:37of radiation and rectal surgery
- 31:38can also affect your bowels,
- 31:40also your bladder, also sexual
- 31:41function.
- 31:42So are there instances where
- 31:44we can avoid some of
- 31:45these treatments and try to
- 31:46reduce toxicity but not,
- 31:49you know, have a negative
- 31:50impact on cancer outcomes.
- 31:52So I'll talk first about
- 31:54organ preservation,
- 31:55which is what the term
- 31:57we use for,
- 31:59trying to maybe,
- 32:00defer surgery,
- 32:02unless needed.
- 32:04So this is an example.
- 32:05We have studies that showed
- 32:07us that in patients who
- 32:08have,
- 32:09a complete response, so you
- 32:10can achieve a complete response
- 32:12to chemotherapy
- 32:14followed by that long course
- 32:15of radiation that I that
- 32:17I described,
- 32:18complete response to the best
- 32:19of our abilities to detect
- 32:21that. So based on MRI,
- 32:23based on a good rectal
- 32:24exam, based on a scope
- 32:26going up and looking inside
- 32:27the rectum.
- 32:28And so if we take
- 32:30those patients who had a
- 32:31complete response
- 32:32and,
- 32:34watch them closely,
- 32:35what are the outcomes,
- 32:37in deferring surgery?
- 32:39This particular study was actually
- 32:41asking that question by just
- 32:42looking at two different sequences
- 32:45of therapy. So we have
- 32:46patients with stage two or
- 32:47three rectal cancer.
- 32:48Either they had their radiation
- 32:50first, and then they went
- 32:51to see doctor Cicchini and
- 32:52had their four months of
- 32:53chemo, or they started with
- 32:55doctor Cicchini and then came
- 32:56to me.
- 32:57For this stage of patients,
- 32:59and they were probably highly
- 33:00selected as all patients are
- 33:01on a clinical trial,
- 33:03if you looked at them
- 33:04about eight to twelve weeks
- 33:06after their therapy,
- 33:07in both of those approaches,
- 33:09about three quarters of them
- 33:11had a complete response so
- 33:12they could be offered,
- 33:14what we call active surveillance.
- 33:16So what is this active
- 33:17surveillance? So,
- 33:18it's a lot of poking
- 33:19and prodding,
- 33:20rectal exam and a scope
- 33:22every four months for the
- 33:23first two years and then
- 33:24every six months,
- 33:26MRI at least twice a
- 33:27year for two years and
- 33:28then annually.
- 33:30What we found was that,
- 33:32or what this study found
- 33:33was that in about half
- 33:34of the patients,
- 33:36it turned out that their
- 33:37tumor didn't recur, that complete
- 33:39response was sustained,
- 33:41and they did not need
- 33:42to have a surgery. And
- 33:43then if you look at
- 33:44how they did and their
- 33:45survival overall compared to what
- 33:47we call historical controls or
- 33:49just what we know can
- 33:50be expected of patients who
- 33:52received kind of the whole
- 33:53standard treatment paradigm,
- 33:55the survival seemed comparable.
- 33:58And so, you know, from
- 34:00these kinds of studies,
- 34:01what we learned is that
- 34:02we have to be very
- 34:03selective.
- 34:05This requires certain stage of
- 34:07tumor where we expect a
- 34:08complete response.
- 34:09If we do see that
- 34:10complete response,
- 34:12in a patient who is
- 34:13willing to be really actively
- 34:15followed closely,
- 34:17thinking about deferring surgery is
- 34:20an option,
- 34:21that we would make as
- 34:22a multidisciplinary
- 34:24team,
- 34:25and really can be applied
- 34:26in select cases, but with
- 34:28obvious benefits.
- 34:30Then I'm gonna talk a
- 34:32little bit about what about,
- 34:33options where you could,
- 34:35maybe not need to use
- 34:37radiation.
- 34:38And so this comes into
- 34:40play for patients that are
- 34:41kinda just meeting the criteria
- 34:43where you would consider radiation.
- 34:45So maybe you have some
- 34:46lymph nodes but not that
- 34:47many, or maybe there's depth
- 34:49that takes you to the
- 34:50t three stage but not
- 34:51the t four stage.
- 34:54So,
- 34:55in this study, they were
- 34:56letting those patients have the
- 34:57standard radiation going on to
- 34:59surgery and then chemo afterwards,
- 35:01or saying, okay. If we
- 35:02give them the chemo first
- 35:04and they look like they're
- 35:05responding, at least a response
- 35:07of twenty percent by MRI,
- 35:09What happens if we just
- 35:10don't radiate them, go straight
- 35:11to surgery?
- 35:12And in the patients where
- 35:14they didn't seem to respond
- 35:15to chemo, we'll give them
- 35:16the standard radiation. And it
- 35:18turns out most patients, majority,
- 35:20really, like ninety percent of
- 35:21patients were responding and had
- 35:24their radiation emitted,
- 35:26and a smaller fraction needed
- 35:27to have the radiation.
- 35:29So really, this is saying,
- 35:30can we use chemo first,
- 35:33and then selectively use
- 35:36radiation only for that small
- 35:37fraction that aren't responding to
- 35:39chemo? How does that affect
- 35:40the overall outcome?
- 35:42And the bottom line is
- 35:43there was no difference in
- 35:44local control of the tumor,
- 35:46survival disease free or overall
- 35:49survival.
- 35:49Again, a really select group
- 35:51of patients, so this is
- 35:52not for all comers with
- 35:53locally advanced rectal cancer.
- 35:55These are for the lower
- 35:56risk category where your tumors
- 35:58up higher,
- 35:59maybe a t two or
- 36:01a t three with limited
- 36:02or no lymph node involvement.
- 36:05Absolutely. If we're not gonna
- 36:06use pelvic radiation, you're gonna
- 36:08need doctor Mangio to remove
- 36:09the tumor with surgery.
- 36:11So just another,
- 36:13scenario where we can kind
- 36:14of tweak the, standard treatment
- 36:16course,
- 36:17for specific criteria,
- 36:19of your particular tumor presentation.
- 36:23And then, obviously, there are
- 36:25some benefits to not having
- 36:26radiation as part of your
- 36:27treatment course, and I think
- 36:29I'll focus on the long
- 36:30term benefits, which are really
- 36:32that,
- 36:33a year after surgery, if
- 36:34you looked at these patients
- 36:35who did not need radiation,
- 36:37they had lower rates of
- 36:38fatigue and neuropathy,
- 36:40but really better sexual function
- 36:42and also something that is
- 36:43important, especially with younger population
- 36:45of patients,
- 36:46being diagnosed with rectal cancer,
- 36:49better preservation of fertility
- 36:51and ovarian function. So one
- 36:53thing that can happen with
- 36:54pelvic radiation involving the ovaries
- 36:56is that we can induce
- 36:58early menopause in those patients
- 36:59that are premenopausal.
- 37:00So some advantages for sure
- 37:02for being able to avoid
- 37:03pelvic radiation when feasible.
- 37:06And then lastly, I wanna
- 37:07talk about how we can
- 37:08be helpful in the scenario
- 37:10of oligometastatic
- 37:11disease.
- 37:12So this is what doctor
- 37:14Cicchini described as rectal cancer
- 37:16or colorectal cancer, really,
- 37:19that has metastasized but in
- 37:20a limited fashion.
- 37:22So we have learned that
- 37:24metastasis
- 37:24to,
- 37:25up to five sites really
- 37:27behaves differently and can be
- 37:28treated more aggressively
- 37:30than rectal colorectal cancer that
- 37:31has spread more diffusely within
- 37:33the body.
- 37:35Oftentimes, we remove those limited
- 37:36sites of metastatic disease with
- 37:38surgery.
- 37:39But when surgery is not
- 37:40feasible,
- 37:41we can use radiation, and
- 37:43the type of radiation is
- 37:44slightly different. It's something we
- 37:46call stereotactic,
- 37:48body radiation or stereotactic
- 37:50ablative radiation. I always say
- 37:51to my patients, we're just
- 37:52trying to sound cool with
- 37:53all these fancy names.
- 37:56Some people even shorten the
- 37:57stereotactic ablative to saber.
- 37:59What this means is we're
- 38:00giving a high dose that
- 38:01we can get away with
- 38:02because the tumor is small,
- 38:04and we're rapidly dropping that
- 38:06dose off right with a
- 38:07right outside of your tumor
- 38:09and taking in advantage of
- 38:11technological,
- 38:13advances such that we can
- 38:14account for how your tumor
- 38:16is moving. We can precisely
- 38:18localize your tumor for treatment
- 38:20with imaging during treatment,
- 38:22to make sure that we
- 38:23can safely deposit a really
- 38:25high dose of radiation to
- 38:26these small tumors that can
- 38:28have kind of a definitive
- 38:29ablative effect on the tumor.
- 38:32This is one study and
- 38:33an example of how that's
- 38:35beneficial.
- 38:36So this is looking at
- 38:37patients with kind of mixed
- 38:38tumor types.
- 38:39Colorectal was one of them
- 38:41in that oligometastatic
- 38:43state with up to five
- 38:44metastases.
- 38:45And the study asked, well,
- 38:47if we just give them
- 38:47their standard of care chemotherapy
- 38:50or we add in SBRT
- 38:51to all of the limited
- 38:53metastatic sites, is there a
- 38:55benefit?
- 38:56And the bottom line is
- 38:57the addition of SBRT to
- 38:59the limited oligometastatic
- 39:00sites actually improved progression free
- 39:03survival,
- 39:04and overall survival.
- 39:06So
- 39:07I think, the stereotactic radiation
- 39:09as well as the surgical
- 39:10approach and other local therapies
- 39:12are,
- 39:13increasingly being employed in patients
- 39:15who have limited,
- 39:17sites of metastatic disease.
- 39:19And I'll end just with
- 39:20saying that we do have
- 39:21a new program here at
- 39:22Smilow Cancer Hospital, which is
- 39:24one way of treating oligometastatic
- 39:26disease.
- 39:27So this is new technology
- 39:29called the reflection,
- 39:30which is a pet directed
- 39:32radiation therapy machine.
- 39:34And it can be advantageous
- 39:35in certain cases,
- 39:37particularly
- 39:38if you have disease that's
- 39:39in the lung.
- 39:41And so I'll explain why
- 39:42that is. So a lung
- 39:43tumor is gonna move as
- 39:44you breathe.
- 39:45And for typical stereotactic
- 39:47radiation,
- 39:48we see your tumor.
- 39:49We watch a video. We
- 39:51can get a video CAT
- 39:52scan that shows us how
- 39:53your tumor moves as you
- 39:55breathe, and then we expand
- 39:57the treatment volume to encompass
- 39:59kind of the path your
- 40:00tumor takes as you breathe.
- 40:02With the pet directed therapy,
- 40:04the treatment machine, you receive,
- 40:07an injection of the pet
- 40:08tracer before treatment,
- 40:10and the treatment machine can
- 40:12detect the pet tracer from
- 40:13your tumor. So actually the
- 40:15radiation field will move with
- 40:17your tumor as your tumor
- 40:19moves during treatment. So rather
- 40:20than expanding the radiation field
- 40:22and treating a bigger area
- 40:24to encompass kinda where the
- 40:25tumor moves as you breathe,
- 40:27we're kinda moving the radiation
- 40:28field with your tumor as
- 40:30it moves with the benefit
- 40:31being that we don't have
- 40:32to expand and kind of
- 40:34radiate all this healthy tissue
- 40:35around.
- 40:37So like all things, right,
- 40:38there's specific criteria that your
- 40:40tumor would need to meet
- 40:41in order to be eligible
- 40:43for this type of treatment,
- 40:44but I think really an
- 40:45exciting innovation that we have
- 40:47here at Smilow as one
- 40:48modality
- 40:49to try to aggressively treat,
- 40:51oligometastatic
- 40:52disease.
- 40:54So I'm gonna end there.
- 40:56Little summary,
- 40:57just we know pelvic radiation,
- 41:00plays a key role in
- 41:01curative therapy for locally advanced
- 41:03rectal cancer, but we can
- 41:04tweak the radiation
- 41:05based on your tumor characteristics
- 41:07and what your goals of
- 41:08care are. We, in general,
- 41:10prefer the long course daily
- 41:12radiation for five weeks, especially
- 41:14for the high risk tumors
- 41:15that are lower down or
- 41:16have deeper involvement of the
- 41:17rectum or lymph node involvement,
- 41:20or if you're thinking about
- 41:21preserving the rectum and not
- 41:23needing surgery.
- 41:24Organ preservation with this active
- 41:26surveillance of MRI and scope
- 41:28can be considered in very
- 41:29select cases
- 41:31if you do achieve a
- 41:32complete response to chemo and
- 41:33radiation.
- 41:35We can think about omitting
- 41:36radiation for certain favorable risk,
- 41:39rectal cancer patients that don't
- 41:41have a lot of involvement
- 41:42of lymph nodes or not
- 41:43as deep in the rectum.
- 41:44And finally, we can think
- 41:45about the stereotactic radiation as
- 41:47well as surgery and other
- 41:48local therapies
- 41:49if you have, limited metastatic
- 41:51disease.
- 41:52Hopefully, I didn't take up
- 41:53too much time. I'm gonna
- 41:54pass the baton to doctor
- 41:55Mangio.
- 41:57Thank you, doctor Johan. Just
- 41:58to,
- 42:00ask one question about radiation
- 42:01is can you expand a
- 42:02little bit on the side
- 42:03effects of radiation?
- 42:05So side effects when we're
- 42:06treating the pelvis really are
- 42:07related to the organs that
- 42:08are in the pelvis. And
- 42:10so what we're talking about
- 42:11is bowel,
- 42:12and bladder primarily. So,
- 42:14when you're in the midst
- 42:15of a course of radiation,
- 42:17you can experience looser stools,
- 42:18frequent stools, diarrhea as a
- 42:20result of radiation.
- 42:22That can be typically,
- 42:24controlled with Imodium or other
- 42:26anti diarrheal medications.
- 42:28You can experience frequency of
- 42:30urination from inflammation to the
- 42:32bladder or maybe a little
- 42:33bit of slight burning with
- 42:34urination,
- 42:35a little bit like a
- 42:36mild urinary tract infection.
- 42:38Most patients tell me that's
- 42:39annoying, but it's tolerable.
- 42:41There's a lot of talk
- 42:42about skin reaction with radiation.
- 42:44If we're treating a higher
- 42:45rectal tumor that's really, you
- 42:47know, kind of within the
- 42:48pelvis, the dose to the
- 42:49skin should be minimal. There
- 42:50may be a little bit
- 42:51of a redness of the
- 42:52skin, but it should be,
- 42:54something that is, you know,
- 42:55not barely
- 42:56noticeable.
- 42:57We really worry more about,
- 42:59skin reaction when we're dealing
- 43:00with those really low tumors
- 43:02that are coming to the
- 43:02anus.
- 43:03There, we're driving the dose
- 43:05of radiation right to the
- 43:06perianal skin, and that's where
- 43:08redness and skin breakdown there,
- 43:10particularly when you're having diarrhea,
- 43:12can be a little bit
- 43:12more challenging to manage,
- 43:14but temporary and typically heals
- 43:17within two to three weeks
- 43:18after treatment.
- 43:19Long term side effects, I
- 43:20touched upon the, you know,
- 43:22for an a younger woman,
- 43:23early menopause,
- 43:25fertility issues. There can be
- 43:27low risk of more severe
- 43:29kind of bowel side effects
- 43:31from inflammation and scar tissue
- 43:32that can develop, so, like,
- 43:34obstruction of bowel and things
- 43:35things like that. But, thankfully,
- 43:37those risks are much lower,
- 43:39and things that we don't
- 43:40expect to see.
- 43:43Yeah. There's another question about
- 43:44radiation to the lung, but
- 43:45you answered it during during
- 43:47your discussion there. And I'll
- 43:48just answer the one question
- 43:49about KRAS g twelve d.
- 43:50Yes. Yale has a number
- 43:51of clinical trials focused on
- 43:54tumors with KRAS g twelve
- 43:55d, including a trial for
- 43:56patients that have, are receiving
- 43:58their initial treatment for metastatic
- 44:00colorectal cancer as well as
- 44:01a number of trials patients
- 44:03that have received prior chemotherapies.
- 44:04And now I'd like to
- 44:05introduce doctor Anne Manju from
- 44:07colorectal surgery.
- 44:09Hi. Thanks, everyone. Let me
- 44:11share my screen.
- 44:18Alright.
- 44:21So I'm gonna talk about
- 44:22a little bit of the
- 44:23plumbing work, and so that's
- 44:24surgical therapy for colon and
- 44:26rectal cancers.
- 44:29So where do I fit
- 44:30in? And we kind of
- 44:31heard everything. Someone you get
- 44:32a bit taken out, you
- 44:33get a biopsy, so you
- 44:35name it. You stage it
- 44:36with all the imaging, and
- 44:37then we treat it. And
- 44:39finally, you come,
- 44:40for rectal cancer, you'll often
- 44:42come to me at the
- 44:43end. For colon cancer, you
- 44:45may come to me at
- 44:46the beginning depending on
- 44:48what the stage of your
- 44:49cancer is.
- 44:51So sort of brings us
- 44:52to what's a colectomy?
- 44:54So a colectomy is our
- 44:56surgical term for removing a
- 44:58part of the colon.
- 45:00And so when we think
- 45:01about the colon, I just
- 45:03like to break it down
- 45:04into sort of five parts.
- 45:05So it looks backwards here.
- 45:07The r and the l
- 45:08are for right and left
- 45:08because this is how we
- 45:09are always thinking about things
- 45:11looking at imaging studies. So
- 45:13the colon starts here on
- 45:14the right side. This is
- 45:15the right colon. It goes
- 45:16across the middle. That's the
- 45:18transverse colon. It comes down
- 45:20left side. We call that
- 45:21the left colon or the
- 45:22descending colon. It makes this
- 45:24little s shaped swoop here.
- 45:26This is the sigmoid colon.
- 45:28And finally, down here, you've
- 45:29got the last part which
- 45:30is the rectum. And we'll
- 45:31we'll talk a little bit
- 45:32more about the rectum a
- 45:33little bit later.
- 45:35So when we talk about
- 45:36removing the colon when you've
- 45:38got cancer, well, wherever your
- 45:40cancer is, we're gonna remove
- 45:42that part of the colon.
- 45:43So if it's in the
- 45:44right colon, we're gonna remove
- 45:45the right colon and we
- 45:47do it not only just
- 45:48taking the wall of the
- 45:49colon itself, but then we're
- 45:51gonna take the blood
- 45:55vessels supply that area.
- 45:57And we want to get
- 45:58everything that is feeding that
- 46:00area because we know that
- 46:01around all those blood vessels
- 46:03are your lymph nodes. And
- 46:04the lymph nodes are sort
- 46:06of the first sign of
- 46:07escape. So if you've come
- 46:09to see me and you
- 46:10have an early colon cancer
- 46:12and they've done your CT
- 46:14scan of your chest and
- 46:15your belly and your pelvis,
- 46:17and they didn't see any
- 46:18spread anywhere else, the lungs
- 46:20and the liver and all
- 46:20the other solid organs are
- 46:22clear, we're gonna go to
- 46:23the operating room. But what
- 46:24we're gonna want to know
- 46:26and what doctor Ciacchini is
- 46:27gonna want to know after
- 46:28surgery is, well, were any
- 46:30of the lymph nodes positive?
- 46:31So when we go and
- 46:32take each of these major
- 46:34blood vessels, so for the
- 46:35right colon, we're gonna take
- 46:36this part of the artery
- 46:38right here, and we're gonna
- 46:39take in any of the
- 46:40blood supply that feeds this
- 46:41whole area. And we wanna
- 46:42get good healthy tissue
- 46:44around wherever your tumor is.
- 46:46If your tumor is here,
- 46:46we may take a small
- 46:47part of the small intestine
- 46:49and and the colon, but
- 46:50we don't wanna see it
- 46:51when we're taking it out
- 46:52because we want the tumor
- 46:54to be safely on the
- 46:55inside with good clean margins
- 46:56on either side. We wanna
- 46:58take the blood vessel nice
- 46:59and low or nice and
- 47:01high, basically very close to
- 47:03this big guy in the
- 47:03back and that's your aorta.
- 47:05And with it, we're gonna
- 47:06take all of the fat
- 47:08that's surrounding all those blood
- 47:09vessels in that whole part
- 47:10of the colon. And when
- 47:12we do that, we get
- 47:13all the lymph nodes that
- 47:15are hiding in there. That
- 47:16goes to the pathologist who
- 47:17then actually pick them out
- 47:19one by one, look at
- 47:21each and every one, look
- 47:22to see if there's cancer
- 47:24in those lymph nodes, and
- 47:25then put together a final
- 47:26report that comes about seven
- 47:28to ten days after surgery.
- 47:31Okay. There are lots of
- 47:33types of colectomies
- 47:34you can do. And when
- 47:35we're talking about cancer, we
- 47:37tailor it to the blood
- 47:38supply
- 47:39that serves each
- 47:41part of the colon. So
- 47:42I put little asterisks here
- 47:44to give you an idea.
- 47:45These are all different places
- 47:47that you could have a
- 47:48tumor in your colon,
- 47:50and we would look at
- 47:51the appropriate blood supply and
- 47:53then take that part of
- 47:54the colon always trying to
- 47:56center it. Now there's a
- 47:57couple down here where you
- 47:58see we're taking out a
- 47:59lot of the colon, and
- 48:00these are some special circumstances.
- 48:02Patients who may have something
- 48:04like inflammatory bowel disease, such
- 48:06as ulcerative colitis or Crohn's
- 48:07disease, who may not only
- 48:09have had this disease for
- 48:10a long standing period, but
- 48:11now they have prevented with
- 48:12a with a cancer. And
- 48:13in those special circumstances,
- 48:15we we often will have
- 48:16to remove most of the
- 48:17colon at that time because
- 48:18the risk to remaining colon
- 48:20is quite high.
- 48:23Okay. So this now is
- 48:25sort of to come back
- 48:26to what doctor Joheng was
- 48:27talking about,
- 48:29rectal cancer is sort of
- 48:31we think about it a
- 48:32little bit differently than colon
- 48:33cancer. So when you have
- 48:34a colon cancer, I'll just
- 48:36go back here for a
- 48:36moment, and let's call colon
- 48:38cancer anything that is sort
- 48:41of
- 48:42above this area, anything that's
- 48:44really above
- 48:45this line right here,
- 48:47that's gonna be a colon
- 48:48cancer. When we drop into
- 48:50the last fifteen
- 48:52centimeters
- 48:53of the of the large
- 48:54bowel, that's the rectum. And
- 48:56the rectum lives about two
- 48:58thirds of the way underneath
- 49:00this sort of line here,
- 49:01which is called the peritoneal
- 49:02reflection, which separates it from
- 49:04the main part of the
- 49:05abdominal cavity.
- 49:06The top part of it
- 49:07right here, the top one
- 49:09third is in the regular
- 49:10part of the abdominal cavity
- 49:11with the rest of the
- 49:12colon.
- 49:13And depending on the stage,
- 49:15sometimes we will treat this
- 49:16upper rectal cancer as a
- 49:18colon cancer and operate it
- 49:20on it right away.
- 49:21But when it is below
- 49:23this line, so that's a
- 49:24cancer that would be up
- 49:25here.
- 49:26But once we're talking about
- 49:27a rectal cancer that's below
- 49:29here, that's when you would
- 49:30see both doctor Cicchini
- 49:32and doctor Johan
- 49:34well before May to get
- 49:36a full amount of treatment
- 49:37beforehand like they talked about
- 49:38with the total neoadjuvant therapy.
- 49:41And then we would come
- 49:42in afterwards and take out
- 49:43these tumors.
- 49:45And so
- 49:46important parts to note here,
- 49:48and this is something that
- 49:48we think about and go
- 49:50with what I'm gonna talk
- 49:51about next. But at the
- 49:52very bottom
- 49:53of the rectum, we have
- 49:54what's called the anal canal,
- 49:56and we have these two
- 49:57really important muscles here. And
- 49:59these are called your anal
- 50:00sphincter muscles or your anal
- 50:02sphincter complex. There's an inner
- 50:03muscle
- 50:04and an outer muscle. And
- 50:06we need those to to
- 50:08maintain continence or to hold
- 50:09poop on the inside when
- 50:10we don't want to come
- 50:11out. So as we get
- 50:13lower and lower,
- 50:15we have to think increasingly
- 50:17about, well, where is this
- 50:19tumor
- 50:20in relationship
- 50:21to these
- 50:22muscles? And are we able
- 50:24to get a clean or
- 50:26negative margin
- 50:27beneath this tumor?
- 50:29And so as we get
- 50:30down to right about the
- 50:32top of the muscles, that's
- 50:33about as far as we
- 50:34can go with surgery and
- 50:35we'll talk a little bit
- 50:36more about the types of
- 50:37surgery in a second.
- 50:39But once we get down
- 50:41here where you have a
- 50:42tumor that's,
- 50:43adenocarcinoma,
- 50:44which is a typical type
- 50:45of colon or rectal cancer,
- 50:47not a skin cancer that's
- 50:48crawled from the outside in.
- 50:50Once we get down here,
- 50:51this usually means that we're
- 50:53unable to save the anus,
- 50:55this bottom part, and the
- 50:57sphincters down there because in
- 50:58order to get rid of
- 50:59the cancer completely, we'll have
- 51:00to take that out.
- 51:02And so that brings me
- 51:03back to the question I
- 51:04get very often when I
- 51:06sit down with someone. Well,
- 51:08what is a stoma or
- 51:09an ostomy or a bag
- 51:11or a colostomy bag, and
- 51:13am I going to need
- 51:14one?
- 51:15And so
- 51:16ostomy or stoma comes from
- 51:18the Greek and Latin words
- 51:19for mouth, and they've actually
- 51:20been around for a very
- 51:21long time.
- 51:23And it's where we pull
- 51:25a small amount of the
- 51:27colon or the small bowel
- 51:29through the skin,
- 51:31fold it over like a
- 51:32turtleneck, sew it to the
- 51:33skin, and the stool no
- 51:34longer comes out your bottom,
- 51:36but it comes out through
- 51:38this opening and it empties
- 51:39into a little bag
- 51:41that collects the stool.
- 51:43So not everyone
- 51:44is going to need an
- 51:46ostomy bag. In fact, that's
- 51:48really permanent ostomy bags are
- 51:50something that we are really
- 51:52well able to avoid in
- 51:54what we do today.
- 51:57Going back here,
- 51:58looking at this lowest
- 52:00level of tumor, the kind
- 52:02of tumor that's growing within
- 52:03the anal canal that gets
- 52:04its upfront treatment
- 52:06with its total neoadjuvant
- 52:08therapy,
- 52:09If it responds completely like
- 52:11doctor Joheng was talking about
- 52:12and there's no tumor remaining
- 52:14and you're up for a
- 52:15lot of prodding and poking,
- 52:17we can often do what's
- 52:18called watch and wait, and
- 52:19you get to avoid me.
- 52:21And we watch it very
- 52:22closely in the clinic over
- 52:23time to make sure that
- 52:25it doesn't grow back, but
- 52:26that does allow some people
- 52:28to to preserve their sphincters
- 52:30when otherwise they would not
- 52:31be able to.
- 52:33You know, forward.
- 52:36Alright.
- 52:36Then there's this idea of
- 52:38temporary versus permanent stoma bag.
- 52:41So a lot of times,
- 52:43especially in cases of rectal
- 52:44cancer where you have received
- 52:46upfront treatment, and even though
- 52:48the tumor isn't so low
- 52:49that we can't get it
- 52:50out, we can still save
- 52:51the sphincter muscles
- 52:53because that tissue
- 52:54is
- 52:56a little bit, we'll say,
- 52:57jeopardized by the fact that
- 52:58it's had the radiation, the
- 53:00chemotherapy. It makes its healing
- 53:01potential in the moment
- 53:04a little bit lower. And
- 53:05what we know is when
- 53:06you're trying to bring two
- 53:07ends of the colon together
- 53:09after you've taken out the
- 53:10segment
- 53:11containing the tumor, it's very
- 53:13important that it heals absolutely
- 53:14perfectly so you don't get
- 53:16what's called a leak.
- 53:17We know that when you've
- 53:18been radiated,
- 53:20that oftentimes that risk of
- 53:21leakage
- 53:22goes up substantially. And so
- 53:24for many patients who have
- 53:25rectal cancer who get full
- 53:27treatment beforehand, we make what's
- 53:28called a temporary stoma. And
- 53:30temporary in our world is
- 53:32four to six weeks. We
- 53:33do a little leak test
- 53:34at the six week mark,
- 53:36and then we close the
- 53:37stoma right after that. And
- 53:39so really at this point
- 53:40in time, there are very
- 53:41few patients that we have,
- 53:44that require
- 53:45a permanent stoma. It's really
- 53:46those with a tumor that
- 53:47doesn't respond to treatment
- 53:49that's very low down and
- 53:51and well within the anal
- 53:52canal involving the anal sphincters.
- 53:56Alright. So how do we
- 53:57do colon surgery today?
- 54:00This is the photo that
- 54:01hung on the wall where
- 54:02I trained in Boston, and
- 54:04this is a a picture
- 54:05of the the first surgery
- 54:06that was ever done under
- 54:08anesthesia. And this was at,
- 54:10the math general.
- 54:11So people really literally sat
- 54:13around in the stadiums and
- 54:14and watched, and it was
- 54:15done open, and they didn't
- 54:17have scrubs.
- 54:18We continue to do open
- 54:20surgery for a really long
- 54:21time.
- 54:22But by the time we
- 54:23got to the nineteen eighties,
- 54:25laparoscopic
- 54:26surgery had really come into
- 54:29being.
- 54:30As you can see, you
- 54:31had sort of an old
- 54:32screen and people holding these
- 54:34long skinny instruments on sticks
- 54:36with a camera and tiny
- 54:37instruments,
- 54:38and this is called laparoscopic
- 54:39surgery.
- 54:41We still do a lot
- 54:42of laparoscopic
- 54:43surgery today.
- 54:44It usually involves at least
- 54:46two people because you you
- 54:48need an extra pair of
- 54:49hands because we currently
- 54:50only have two hands. And,
- 54:52someone's got a hold of
- 54:53a camera, and you need
- 54:54at least two working hands
- 54:56to do an operation to
- 54:57take out a part of
- 54:57the colon.
- 55:00More recently
- 55:01and stuff that you may
- 55:02have heard of or seen
- 55:03on TV, but within the
- 55:04last twenty years, we've gone
- 55:06on to robotic surgery.
- 55:09This is a picture of
- 55:10the intuitive DaVinci robotic system,
- 55:13and that's what we use
- 55:14at Yale. In fact, actually,
- 55:16this is the last version
- 55:17of it, and we have
- 55:19actually upgraded our entire system
- 55:20to the d b five
- 55:22intuitive system, which is the
- 55:23newest robot that's on the
- 55:24market.
- 55:26And so
- 55:27I would say we have
- 55:28probably one of the largest
- 55:30robotic programs
- 55:31in the northeast just by
- 55:33the sheer
- 55:35number of robots that we
- 55:36have here at Yale. And
- 55:38robotic surgery is kind of
- 55:39fun. It's also really interesting.
- 55:42So what you're looking at
- 55:44in this picture is the
- 55:45patient would be here laying
- 55:47on the table, and this
- 55:48is the intuitive surgical robot.
- 55:50It has four arms that
- 55:52can be controlled by one
- 55:54person. So you have a
- 55:55camera,
- 55:56which is right here, and
- 55:57you get three operating arms.
- 55:59There's always someone at the
- 56:01bedside because you have to
- 56:02exchange the instruments manually, and
- 56:04it uses the exact same
- 56:06kind of ports that you
- 56:07use when you're doing laparoscopic
- 56:09surgery.
- 56:10But instead, they have a
- 56:11little adapter on them that
- 56:12clips into the robotic arms.
- 56:15The instruments themselves from a
- 56:16distance appear very similar. We
- 56:18have scissors. We have graspers.
- 56:21We have really nice cameras.
- 56:23But what's really great about
- 56:25the robotic instruments is that
- 56:27they're what we call wristed.
- 56:29So a typical laparoscopic
- 56:31scissors, like a scissors, like
- 56:32you cut with, is straight.
- 56:33It it it can cut
- 56:34in one plane. It's on
- 56:36a stick so you can
- 56:36move it up and down,
- 56:37up and down, and that's
- 56:39how you can cut or
- 56:40divide the tissue that you
- 56:41need to divide to take
- 56:42out a part of the
- 56:42colon.
- 56:43When it comes to robotic
- 56:44surgery,
- 56:45it has an actual wrist
- 56:47and it has more degrees
- 56:48of freedom or more ability
- 56:49to rotate on an axis
- 56:51than the human wrist does.
- 56:53And all of the instruments,
- 56:55that the robot uses are
- 56:57the same way. And the
- 56:58camera is actually not a
- 56:59single camera. It's two
- 57:01high resolution cameras within one
- 57:03camera body, which means when
- 57:05you're looking through the console,
- 57:06which is about five feet
- 57:07away from the patient, you
- 57:09actually are in a three
- 57:10d viewer headset. So everything
- 57:12that you see
- 57:14is in three dimensions, and
- 57:15the magnification
- 57:17is much higher than it
- 57:18would be. And there's no
- 57:19glare coming off of a
- 57:20flat screen like you would
- 57:21in laparoscopy, but you're actually
- 57:23seeing
- 57:24in three dimensions.
- 57:26Another area when it comes
- 57:27to colon surgery that's of
- 57:29particular interest is the fact
- 57:30that the robot also has
- 57:31a near infrared light source
- 57:33or laser built into it,
- 57:35and that can excite certain
- 57:37injectable chemicals to allow us
- 57:39to see where there is
- 57:40blood supply.
- 57:42Like we talked about in
- 57:43the very beginning,
- 57:44the blood supply to each
- 57:45part of the colon determines
- 57:47where we're gonna take it
- 57:48out and how we decide
- 57:49how much of the colon
- 57:50around the tumor we're gonna
- 57:51take out. In this case,
- 57:53when we get ready to
- 57:54divide the tumor and we
- 57:56want the tumor to be
- 57:57in the area of the
- 57:58colon that's coming out, and
- 57:59we've taken away the blood
- 58:01supply there, but we wanna
- 58:02make sure that new connection
- 58:03that we make is gonna
- 58:04be healthy enough so that
- 58:05when we bring the ends
- 58:06together, they heal.
- 58:08We'll inject this green this
- 58:09this liquid. It's called endocyanine
- 58:11green,
- 58:12and we inject it in.
- 58:13It actually lights up all
- 58:14the blood vessels. So you
- 58:15can see this area here
- 58:16is really bright green, and
- 58:18that corresponds to the same
- 58:19part of the colon right
- 58:20here.
- 58:21It tells us it's got
- 58:22great perfusion. But the part
- 58:24where the tumor is, this
- 58:25is the back end of
- 58:26of the upper part of
- 58:27the tattoo here on this
- 58:28side. It all looks the
- 58:29same. It all looks pink.
- 58:30But when we look here,
- 58:31you see it's not very
- 58:32green, and that tells us
- 58:33that this area doesn't have
- 58:34good blood supply. So we
- 58:36know when we're gonna cut
- 58:37the tumor out, we're gonna
- 58:38cut right here into the
- 58:39healthy green area, and that's
- 58:40the area that has a
- 58:41good blood supply that we're
- 58:42gonna use to make that
- 58:44connection.
- 58:44So that's another benefit.
- 58:46This is just a little
- 58:47bit about what does the
- 58:48data actually show for robotic
- 58:50surgery compared to more old
- 58:52fashioned surgery, which is open
- 58:54surgery.
- 58:55A lot shorter hospital stays
- 58:57return to normal activity and
- 58:59wound complication rates. It has
- 59:01been pitted
- 59:02together, especially in colon and
- 59:04rectal surgery in particular,
- 59:06head to head with laparoscopic
- 59:08surgery along a number of
- 59:10different clinical trials. And robotic
- 59:12surgery has been equally efficacious
- 59:14with the same cancer outcomes,
- 59:16but other quality of life
- 59:17outcomes such as sexual function
- 59:19are actually better in robotic
- 59:21surgery.
- 59:22And that's thought to be
- 59:24due to the extreme stability
- 59:25and precision of the viewing
- 59:27platform with the three d
- 59:28viewing, which allows us to
- 59:29spare a lot of the
- 59:30nerves, which sometimes you just
- 59:32can't see with laparoscopic
- 59:33surgery.
- 59:35Alright. So that's a little
- 59:36bit about the nuts and
- 59:38bolts. And without cutting too
- 59:40much into what Mike talked
- 59:41about, I just want to
- 59:42mention one thing that's near
- 59:43and dear to my heart
- 59:44with just a couple slides
- 59:45as we wrap up. What's
- 59:47new?
- 59:48I I don't think you
- 59:49can avoid the news.
- 59:51Shame with the passing of,
- 59:52mister Vanderbeek, but
- 59:55colon cancer is rising in
- 59:56young people. It's now the
- 59:58number one cancer killer among
- 60:00adults under fifty.
- 01:00:01It's increased twofold in adults
- 01:00:03under fifty since the nineteen
- 01:00:05nineties.
- 01:00:06And now one in five
- 01:00:07new colon cancers will be
- 01:00:08under the age of fifty
- 01:00:10five. And oftentimes, we're seeing
- 01:00:12young people
- 01:00:12present with really advanced stage
- 01:00:14disease, and this is because
- 01:00:16we're even we've went from
- 01:00:17a screening age of fifty,
- 01:00:18and in twenty twenty one,
- 01:00:19we rolled it back to
- 01:00:20forty five.
- 01:00:22But even still, we're catching
- 01:00:23people younger than that because
- 01:00:24we're not screening people in
- 01:00:25their thirties.
- 01:00:28I get asked this a
- 01:00:29lot in my clinic and
- 01:00:31why are more young people
- 01:00:32getting colon cancer. And the
- 01:00:34real honest answer is we
- 01:00:35don't have a very good
- 01:00:36answer to that question.
- 01:00:38There are a lot of
- 01:00:39factors that are probably involved
- 01:00:41in this. That includes the
- 01:00:42diet and your food environment.
- 01:00:44We know that there's a
- 01:00:45rising rate of obesity, type
- 01:00:47two diabetes, and metabolic syndrome,
- 01:00:49and we know that there's
- 01:00:50actually very good data that
- 01:00:52sugary beverage consumption between the
- 01:00:54ages of thirteen and eighteen
- 01:00:55and obesity in that age
- 01:00:56range
- 01:00:57predicts later obesity driven cancers
- 01:01:00of which colon cancer is
- 01:01:01one of them. We know
- 01:01:02that our food environment changes
- 01:01:05the natural healthy bacteria that
- 01:01:06live in our gut,
- 01:01:08and we know that changes
- 01:01:09in those bacteria can lead
- 01:01:10to more inflammatory states, which
- 01:01:12can promote carcinogenesis.
- 01:01:14And again, we talked about
- 01:01:15genetics as well earlier.
- 01:01:17I wanted to talk about
- 01:01:18one last area that's sort
- 01:01:20of new to what we're
- 01:01:20doing at Yale and something
- 01:01:22that is part of our
- 01:01:23loving your guts and food
- 01:01:24is medicine campaign, which is
- 01:01:27understanding how your ZIP code
- 01:01:29affects your cancer risk, how
- 01:01:30food environment is involved
- 01:01:33in in carcinogenesis.
- 01:01:34And one of the things
- 01:01:35that we know is there
- 01:01:36areas that don't have good
- 01:01:37food supply, whether it's access
- 01:01:39to healthy food or being
- 01:01:40surrounded by a preponderance of
- 01:01:42unhealthy food, which is what
- 01:01:44a food swamp is.
- 01:01:45And we know that this
- 01:01:47can have an impact on
- 01:01:49can early onset colorectal cancer
- 01:01:51and its outcomes.
- 01:01:53We have been doing a
- 01:01:54lot of research on this
- 01:01:55by mapping out everything in
- 01:01:56the entire state of Connecticut.
- 01:01:58And what we have found
- 01:01:59in our original Yale data
- 01:02:01where we mapped everyone at
- 01:02:02Yale was that certainly we
- 01:02:03saw worse cancer outcomes in
- 01:02:05our early onset cancer patients
- 01:02:07who lived in unhealthier food
- 01:02:09environments.
- 01:02:09And more recently, as we
- 01:02:11expanded this to go to
- 01:02:12the entire state of Connecticut,
- 01:02:14with the with the assistance
- 01:02:15of the Connecticut tumor registry,
- 01:02:17What we're seeing in the
- 01:02:18state of Connecticut is actually
- 01:02:19a significant survival difference in
- 01:02:21in our youngest patients with
- 01:02:23cancer who live in unhealthy
- 01:02:24food environments.
- 01:02:26And so I say this
- 01:02:27as we keep talking about
- 01:02:28finding healthy foods to eat,
- 01:02:30but this is something that
- 01:02:31we really there are a
- 01:02:31lot of modifiable risk factors
- 01:02:33that people can
- 01:02:34can look forward to. And
- 01:02:36as part of our Yale
- 01:02:37teaching kitchen, we've been trying
- 01:02:38to work on having
- 01:02:39healthy eating
- 01:02:41teaching kitchen video webinars that
- 01:02:43can talk about how you
- 01:02:44can cook healthy high fiber
- 01:02:45meals for good colon health
- 01:02:47for under four to five
- 01:02:49dollars per serving. And so
- 01:02:50this is something that we've
- 01:02:51been really working on, over
- 01:02:53the last year and a
- 01:02:54half.
- 01:02:55I wanna say thank you
- 01:02:56to everyone for coming tonight.
- 01:02:57I'll stop my share, and
- 01:02:58I'm happy to take any
- 01:02:59questions.
- 01:03:03Thank you, doctor Manju.
- 01:03:05I think we're we're at
- 01:03:07time,
- 01:03:08and the questions have been
- 01:03:10answered in the chat as
- 01:03:11they came available.
- 01:03:13So thank you all for
- 01:03:14your attention this evening. As
- 01:03:17as noted previously and in
- 01:03:19the chat, this will be
- 01:03:20posted online,
- 01:03:21and a link will be
- 01:03:22sent out to anybody that
- 01:03:23registered for the event.
- 01:03:25Thank you again, and thank
- 01:03:27you to my my co
- 01:03:28panelists here. Have a great
- 01:03:29night.