A potential complication of successful neoadjuvant immunotherapy in rectal cancer is the development of stenosing scar tissue. This can block the lumen, making endoscopic surveillance impossible and necessitating surgery for a patient who may have otherwise achieved a complete clinical response.

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A significant challenge in assessing complete response after neoadjuvant immunotherapy for rectal cancer is the presence of mucin pools. These imaging abnormalities can persist for up to two years, mimicking residual tumor and complicating decisions about non-operative management.

While neoadjuvant immunotherapy shows astounding success in MSI-high rectal cancer, the primary difficulty for clinicians lies in accurately assessing complete response via endoscopy and MRI, and managing unique complications like mucin pools or stenosis, rather than simply administering the treatment.

Unlike rectal cancer where MRI aids response assessment, MSI-high colon cancer lacks a reliable imaging modality to confirm a pathologic complete response after neoadjuvant immunotherapy. This makes a "watch and wait" approach far more challenging and not currently recommended outside of a clinical trial.

With 72% response rates to neoadjuvant immunotherapy, surgeons are shifting from immediate, aggressive surgery to a "wait-and-see" approach. Shrinking the tumor first can turn a morbid, disfiguring operation into a much simpler procedure, fundamentally changing the initial surgical evaluation for cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (CSCC).

Standard cancer surgery often removes lymph nodes—the factories producing immune cells. Administering immunotherapy *before* this destructive process is critical. It arms the immune system while it is still intact and capable of mounting a powerful, targeted response against the tumor.

After immunotherapy, many colorectal cancer patients have residual nodules on scans that appear to be partial responses. However, ctDNA testing can confirm these are often just scar tissue, not active disease. This provides the confidence to stop therapy at the two-year mark and avoid unnecessary surgeries for what are effectively complete responses.

While KEYNOTE-905 showed dramatic survival benefits with neoadjuvant plus adjuvant EV-pembrolizumab, its design makes it impossible to isolate the benefit of each phase. The high (57%) pathologic complete response after neoadjuvant therapy alone suggests many patients may be overtreated with adjuvant cycles, risking unnecessary long-term toxicity like neuropathy.

While oncologists focus on the low 4% rate of Interstitial Lung Disease (ILD) from neoadjuvant TDXD, surgeons worry this complication could prevent patients from reaching potentially curative surgery, drawing parallels to issues seen with neoadjuvant immunotherapy.

Dr. Radvanyi advocates for a paradigm shift: treating almost all cancers with neoadjuvant immunotherapy immediately after diagnosis. This "kickstarts" an immune response before standard treatments like surgery and chemotherapy, which are known to be immunosuppressive, can weaken the patient's natural defenses against the tumor.

The success of new treatments like immunotherapy and ADCs leads to more patients achieving a deep response. This high efficacy makes patients question the necessity of a radical cystectomy, a life-altering surgery, creating an urgent need for data-driven, bladder-sparing protocols.

Immunotherapy-Induced Stenosis in Rectal Cancer Can Obstruct Surveillance and Force Surgery | RiffOn