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The Korean Rectal Cancer Multidisciplinary Committee Clinical Practice Guidelines for Rectal Cancer version 2.0open access

Authors
Ryu Hyo SeonKim Hyun JungKang Dong HyunKwak Yoo-KangKwak Han DeokKwon Yoon-HyeKim DalyongKim Baek-HuiKim Jae HyunKim Ji HunKim Jin WonKim Tae HyungKim Hae YoungNam Soo MinNoh Gyoung TaeBong Jun WooSung Nak SongShin Seon HuiLee Kil-yongLee SungchulLee Sea-WonLee Jung WonLee Jong MinIhn Myung HoonLim Joo HanJi Woong BaePyo Dae HeeHong Young KiKwak Jung-Myun
Issue Date
Feb-2026
Publisher
대한대장항문학회
Keywords
Rectal neoplasms; Diagnosis; Neoadjuvant therapy; Surgery; Clinical practice guidelines
Citation
Annals of Coloproctology, v.42, no.1, pp 4 - 33
Pages
30
Indexed
ESCI
KCI
Journal Title
Annals of Coloproctology
Volume
42
Number
1
Start Page
4
End Page
33
URI
https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/63892
DOI
10.3393/ac.2025.01396.0199
ISSN
2287-9714
2287-9722
Abstract
Rectal cancer, which accounts for approximately 40% of colorectal cancers, remains a major clinical concern. Recent advances in diagnostic imaging, surgical techniques, radiotherapy, and systemic treatment have steadily improved rectal cancer outcomes. Considering this, the Korean Rectal Cancer Multidisciplinary (KRCM) Committee has aimed to provide clinicians and policymakers with up-to-date, evidence-based clinical practice guidelines to support optimal decision-making, reflecting current evidence, the Korean healthcare context, and patient values and preferences. The Clinical Practice Guidelines for Rectal Cancer version 2.0 were developed through multidisciplinary collaboration with related academic societies, building upon and updating the KRCM Clinical Practice Guidelines version 1.0 (titled “Multidisciplinary guidelines for the management of rectal cancer”). These consensus guidelines of the KRCM were established based on a comprehensive literature review, evidence synthesis, with recommendation development guided by the GRADE (Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation) methodology, and consideration of applicability in real-world clinical practice under the national health insurance system. Each recommendation has been presented with its strength and level of evidence.
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