For patients diagnosed with Stage III colon cancer, the goal of treatment after surgery is simple: make sure the cancer never comes back. However, for a specific group of patients, traditional chemotherapy hasn't always been as effective as we hoped.
That changed yesterday.
On March 25, 2026, researchers from the Alliance for Clinical Trials in Oncology published results from the landmark ATOMIC trial in The New England Journal of Medicine. The data is being called a "pivotal advancement" that officially establishes a new standard of care for a biologically distinct type of colon cancer.
This breakthrough specifically affects patients with Stage III dMMR colon cancer.
The ATOMIC trial examined whether adding the immunotherapy drug atezolizumab (an anti-PD-L1 antibody) to standard mFOLFOX6 chemotherapy could improve outcomes.
The results were staggering. The study found that adding atezolizumab to the treatment plan reduced the risk of cancer recurrence or death by 50% compared to chemotherapy alone.
The Key Stats:
If you or a loved one are currently navigating a Stage III colon cancer diagnosis, this news is actionable right now.
Until yesterday, the standard treatment after surgery for all Stage III colon cancer was chemotherapy alone. The ATOMIC trial has officially "broken" that mold. By enlisting the body’s own immune system to finish the job that surgery started, we are entering an era of precision oncology where the treatment is as unique as the tumor’s DNA.