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Sarah E. Hoffe

Moffitt Cancer Center

ORCID: 0000-0002-6232-8795

Publishes on Pancreatic and Hepatic Oncology Research, Esophageal Cancer Research and Treatment, Gastric Cancer Management and Outcomes. 500 papers and 13.5k citations.

500Publications
13.5kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Colon Cancer, Version 2.2021, NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology
Al B. Benson, Alan P. Venook, Mahmoud M. Al-Hawary et al.|Journal of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network|2021
Cited by 1.7k

This selection from the NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology (NCCN Guidelines) for Colon Cancer focuses on systemic therapy options for the treatment of metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC), because important updates have recently been made to this section. These updates include recommendations for first-line use of checkpoint inhibitors for mCRC, that is deficient mismatch repair/microsatellite instability-high, recommendations related to the use of biosimilars, and expanded recommendations for biomarker testing. The systemic therapy recommendations now include targeted therapy options for patients with mCRC that is HER2-amplified, or BRAF V600E mutation-positive. Treatment and management of nonmetastatic or resectable/ablatable metastatic disease are discussed in the complete version of the NCCN Guidelines for Colon Cancer available at NCCN.org. Additional topics covered in the complete version include risk assessment, staging, pathology, posttreatment surveillance, and survivorship.

Colon Cancer, Version 1.2017, NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology
Al B. Benson, Alan P. Venook, Lynette Cederquist et al.|Journal of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network|2017
Cited by 1.4kOpen Access

Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the fourth most frequently diagnosed cancer and the second leading cause of cancer death in the United States. In 2016, an estimated 95,270 new cases of colon cancer and approximately 39,220 cases of rectal cancer will occur. During the same year, an estimated 49,190 people will die of colon and rectal cancer combined. 1 Despite these high numbers, the incidence of colon and rectal cancers per 100,000 people decreased from NCCN Colon Cancer, Version 1.

NCCN Guidelines Insights: Colon Cancer, Version 2.2018
Al B. Benson, Alan P. Venook, Mahmoud M. Al-Hawary et al.|Journal of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network|2018
Cited by 1kOpen Access

The NCCN Guidelines for Colon Cancer provide recommendations regarding diagnosis, pathologic staging, surgical management, perioperative treatment, surveillance, management of recurrent and metastatic disease, and survivorship. These NCCN Guidelines Insights summarize the NCCN Colon Cancer Panel discussions for the 2018 update of the guidelines regarding risk stratification and adjuvant treatment for patients with stage III colon cancer, and treatment of BRAF V600E mutation–positive metastatic colorectal cancer with regimens containing vemurafenib.

Rectal Cancer, Version 2.2018, NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology
Al B. Benson, Alan P. Venook, Mahmoud M. Al-Hawary et al.|Journal of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network|2018
Cited by 991Open Access

Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the fourth most frequently diagnosed cancer and the second leading cause of cancer death in the United States. In 2018, an estimated 43,030 new cases of rectal cancer will occur in the United States (25,920 cases in men; 17,110 cases in women), and an estimated 50,630 people will die from rectal and colon cancer combined. 1 Despite

Rectal Cancer, Version 2.2022, NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology
Al B. Benson, Alan P. Venook, Mahmoud M. Al-Hawary et al.|Journal of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network|2022
Cited by 812Open Access

This selection from the NCCN Guidelines for Rectal Cancer focuses on management of malignant polyps and resectable nonmetastatic rectal cancer because important updates have been made to these guidelines. These recent updates include redrawing the algorithms for stage II and III disease to reflect new data supporting the increasingly prominent role of total neoadjuvant therapy, expanded recommendations for short-course radiation therapy techniques, and new recommendations for a "watch-and-wait" nonoperative management technique for patients with cancer that shows a complete response to neoadjuvant therapy. The complete version of the NCCN Guidelines for Rectal Cancer, available online at NCCN.org, covers additional topics including risk assessment, pathology and staging, management of metastatic disease, posttreatment surveillance, treatment of recurrent disease, and survivorship.