This prospective evaluation of 5‐FU and methyl‐CCNU administered in combination to patients with curative surgery for histologically proved colorectal adenocarcinoma is based upon 645 patients randomized between August 1973 and July 1979. Beyond the requirement that the resection be clinically and microscopically complete, patients were not stratified prior to random treatment assignment to surgery alone or surgery followed by adjuvant chemotherapy. Drug therapy consisted of discrete 5‐day courses administered at 7‐week intervals, start to start. Toxic reactions were reported in association with 40% of courses. In 10% of patients with hematologic toxicity, the reactions were sufficiently severe to require the suspension or discontinuation of treatment. Treated patients experienced a slightly more favorable survival than did controls. However, the advantage was seen only in the 216 patients (34% of total) with one to four positive lymph nodes in the resected specimen. Similar proportions of treated and control deaths were attributed to residual or recurrent disease. Cancer 53:1–8 1984.
In this study, the utility of intraoperative ultrasound in the surgical management of hepatic colorectal metastases requiring hepatic resection has been demonstrated. The intraoperative ultrasound technique has been described as a method to accurately monitor curative resection of large colorectal metastases requiring anatomical procedures such as right hepatic trisegmentectomy, bisegmentectomy, and hepatic lobectomy. Preoperative analysis of the patients reported utilizing either computed tomography, ultrasound, or magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated very well the extent of tumor but could not define a major anatomical resection along normal tissue planes. In the 3 patients demonstrated, intraoperative ultrasound was able to confirm a normal hepatic parenchymal dissection overlying the extensive tumors and enabled completion of the curative resections. Furthermore, we have described the intraoperative ultrasound criteria for assessment of resectability. These included a definition of the proximity of the major portal and hepatic venous structures, exclusion of simultaneous minimal metastatic disease in the remaining parenchyma, and the distinction between marginal resectability and resectability for cure along the proposed parenchymal dissection plane. We conclude that intraoperative ultrasound is important in the surgical management of metastatic colorectal cancer and can provide for a more complete clinical staging and appropriate selection of patients for curative major hepatic resection.
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