In a review of 1037 patients with colorectal cancers, there were 32 patients below the age of 40 years (3 percent). Rectal bleeding and abdominal pain were the most common presenting symptoms. The average delay between the onset of symptoms and treatment was 6.5 months. An analysis of tumors according to Dukes' staging revealed no significant difference between young and elderly patients. The younger patients had a greater frequency of mucinous and poorly differentiated carcinoma. When compared by clinical staging, however, the young patient did as well or better than his older counterpart. Clinical staging was the most important prognostic factor, irrespective of age. No inherent difference was found in the virulence of the cancer in the young, and five-year survival rates were not significantly different in young and old patients (59 percent vs. 49 percent).
Between January 1, 1973, and December 31, 1986, 1,734 patients underwent colorectal resections for carcinoma. Patients were divided into two groups: Group I included 163 patients aged greater than or equal to 80 years on first presentation; Group II comprised 1,571 patients aged less than 80 years. The total perioperative mortality rates for the elderly and young group were 15.3 percent and 5 percent, respectively (P less than 0.001). The surgical mortality rates after elective operations in Groups I and II were 7.4 and 4.5 percent, respectively, and were not statistically different. Emergency surgery was associated with a significantly higher incidence of perioperative deaths at any age (P less than 0.001). In the elderly group, most deaths (88 percent) resulted from complications of coexisting medical disorders or thromboembolic complications. The 5-year survival for the young and elderly group were 46.2 percent and 35 percent, respectively (P less than 0.05). However, excluding patients dying from nonmalignant disease, the 5-year survival rate did not differ significantly between the two groups of patients (49.5 percent vs. 41.2 percent).
In patients with BDC, particular attention must be given to the associated intrahepatic bile duct dilatations. We propose a modification of Todani's classification to distinguish cystic, segmental, and fusiform dilatations of the intrahepatic biliary tree in type IV cysts. In patients with segmental left intrahepatic cystic dilatations, combined left liver lobectomy and extrahepatic cyst excision is suggested to decrease late postsurgical biliary complications.
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