A 69-year-old woman presented to her local clinic with vomiting and abdominal distension. Since a bowel obstruction by left colon cancer was suspected due to a marked dilation of the transverse colon, she was referred to our hospital. On admission, an enema disclosed a complete obstruction at the splenic flexure of the colon. An emergency operation was performed, and a temporary loop colostomy was fashioned on the left side of the transverse colon within the range of resection for 2-stage radical surgery. On hospital day 16, a left hemicolectomy D2 was performed by 2-port hand-assisted laparoscopic surgery (2P-HALS) using the stoma as the hand access site, and the tumor was resected along with the removal of the stoma. After surgery, a slight wound infection occurred at the hand access site, but this healed with conservative management. On day 36, she was discharged from hospital. The histological diagnosis was Type 2 circumferential well-differentiated adenocarcinoma with local peritoneal dissemination. Our experience suggests that 2-stage surgery combined with 2P-HALS is applicable even to a large obstructing left colon cancer. This method is less invasive, safe and achieves excellent results, including a good cosmetic outcome.
Abstract. To safely avoid the construction of a covering stoma in patients with advanced lower rectal cancer undergoing laparoscopy assisted colorectal surgery (LACS), we added circumferential manual reinforcing sutures via the transanal approach at the site of mechanical anastomosis. In June 2008, LACS was performed for a tumor of 6 cm in longer diameter in the Rb region of the lower rectum ~5 cm from the anal verge. After intraperitoneal coloproctal anastomosis was performed in the pelvis by the double stapling technique (DST), reinforcement was provided by manual trans-anal suturing (trans-anal reinforcing sutures: TARS). A covering stoma was constructed because this was a high-risk case. Complications such as mild wound infection and stoma trouble occurred, and the patient was discharged after conservative therapy. In June 2008, LACS was performed for a tumor of 5 cm in longer diameter in the Ra region of the lower rectum ~7 cm from the anal verge. After intraperitoneal colorectal anastomosis was performed in the pelvis by DST, TARS were added to avoid a covering stoma. Minor leakage occurred postoperatively, but this was controlled conservatively and the patient was discharged. In patients having surgical treatment of advanced lower rectal cancer, good results were obtained by adding circumferential reinforcing sutures via the trans-anal approach at the site of ultra-low anastomosis after DST.
Histological examination of apoptosis, p21 and p53 in biopsy specimens and scoring were considered to be useful predictive methods for assessing the efficacy of radiotherapy for rectal cancer.
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