Sphincter preservation therapy for distal rectal carcinoma : A review
โ Scribed by Andrea K. Ng; Abram Recht; Paul M. Busse
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1997
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 112 KB
- Volume
- 79
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0008-543X
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Background:
There has been increasing interest in the use of sphincter-preserving therapy for patients with distal rectal carcinomas. the outcomes of conservative treatments for early stage rectal carcinoma appear to be comparable to that achieved with abdominoperineal resection.
Methods:
Retrospective and prospective clinical series of patients with distal rectal carcinoma treated by local excision alone, local excision with postoperative adjuvant therapy, preoperative radiation followed by local excision, or radical circumferential sphincter-sparing surgeries were reviewed. the local control rates, salvage rates, and treatment complications in patients treated by these various methods were examined.
Results:
Patients with t1 distal rectal carcinoma with favorable clinical and histopathologic characteristics treated with local excision alone had a local control rate of greater than 90% in most series. postoperative chemoradiation improved local control for those with t1 disease with unfavorable characteristics, or those with t2 disease. most t3 patients had failure rates of greater than 30% despite adjuvant local and systemic therapy. with high dose preoperative radiation, approximately 80% of patients with locally advanced or unresectable tumors were able to undergo sphincter-preservation treatment.
Conclusions:
Patients with favorable t1 rectal carcinoma are likely to be adequately treated with local excision alone. patients with t1 disease with unfavorable characteristics as well as t2 patients will benefit from postoperative chemoradiation. the use of local therapy in t3 patients needs to be carefully considered because these patients are at relatively high risk for local recurrence despite adjuvant therapy. preoperative radiation followed by either local excision or radical circumferential sphincter-sparing resections appears promising in allowing sphincter preservation in patients with locally advanced tumors.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Locally persistent or recurrent anal carcinoma represents a clinically significant problem, the management of which remains the subject of some controversy. Although the few current data suggest that radical surgery remains the sole salvage treatment able to provide some chance of cure, some authors
## Background: The early detection of gastric carcinoma is neither feasible nor practiced around the world, except on a limited basis in japan. thus, because gastric carcinoma is detected later in most patients throughout the world, those who undergo curative resection still remain at high risk for
One hundred five patients with nasopharyngeal carcinoma were treated with radiation therapy combined with or without chemotherapy at 16 of the participating institutes in Kansai Cancer Therapist Group