Abstract One hundred patients with rectal cancer treated by one surgeon over a 7 year period are reviewed. Fifty-five patients were treated by stapled anterior resection (SAR) and 45 by abdominoperineal resection (APR). Dukes' classification, degree of differentiation and local spread were similar i
Outcome of patients with rectal cancer treated by stapled anterior resection
β Scribed by L. Belli; Dr C. A. Beati; M. Frangi; P. Aseni; G. F. Rondinara
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1988
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 319 KB
- Volume
- 75
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0007-1323
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β¦ Synopsis
Outcome of patients with rectal cancer treated by stapled anterior resection
The mortality, morbidity and long-term survival in stapled anterior resection for rectal carcinoma has been analysed in 74 patients. Twelve patients were Dukes' A , 26 B , 29 C , and 7 'D' (submitted to hepatic resection). Operative mortality rate was 3 per cent. Three patients (4 per cent) had clinical anastomotic leakage. Two patients (3 per cent) developed anastomotic stenosis. Local recurrence was present in three patients (4 per cent). The mean ( s.e.m.) overall survival rate at 5 years was 67*6 per cent. There was no signiJicant difference in survival between Dukes' B and C ( 7 0 f I O per cent versus 59f10 per cent, P = 0.209). Patients with absent local spread had a signiJicantly better 5year survival rate than those with positive local lymph nodes (80 f 7 per cent versus 54 9 per cent, P < 0.01). The present results conJirm the satisfactory use of the E E A '' stapler device for colorectal anastomoses in rectal cancer and in patients with resectable liver metastasis.
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