IMPORTANCE Evidence about the efficacy of laparoscopic resection of rectal cancer is incomplete, particularly for patients with more advanced-stage disease. OBJECTIVE To determine whether laparoscopic resection is noninferior to open resection, as determined by gross pathologic and histologic evaluation of the resected proctectomy specimen. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS A multicenter, balanced, noninferiority, randomized trial enrolled patients between October 2008 and September 2013. The trial was conducted by credentialed surgeons from 35 institutions in the United States and Canada. A total of 486 patients with clinical stage II or III rectal cancer within 12 cm of the anal verge were randomized after completion of neoadjuvant therapy to laparoscopic or open resection. INTERVENTIONS Standard laparoscopic and open approaches were performed by the credentialed surgeons. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES The primary outcome assessing efficacy was a composite of circumferential radial margin greater than 1 mm, distal margin without tumor, and completeness of total mesorectal excision. A 6%noninferiority margin was chosen according to clinical relevance estimation. RESULTS Two hundred forty patients with laparoscopic resection and 222 with open resection were evaluable for analysis of the 486 enrolled. Successful resection occurred in 81.7%of laparoscopic resection cases (95%CI, 76.8%–86.6%) and 86.9%of open resection cases (95%CI, 82.5%–91.4%) and did not support noninferiority (difference, −5.3%; 1-sided 95%CI, −10.8%to ∞; P for noninferiority = .41). Patients underwent low anterior resection (76.7%) or abdominoperineal resection (23.3%). Conversion to open resection occurred in 11.3%of patients. Operative time was significantly longer for laparoscopic resection (mean, 266.2 vs 220.6 minutes; mean difference, 45.5 minutes; 95%CI, 27.7–63.4; P < .001). Length of stay (7.3 vs 7.0 days; mean difference, 0.3 days; 95%CI, −0.6 to 1.1), readmission within 30 days (3.3%vs 4.1%; difference, −0.7%; 95%CI, −4.2%to 2.7%), and severe complications (22.5%vs 22.1%; difference, 0.4%; 95%CI, −4.2%to 2.7%) did not differ significantly. Quality of the total mesorectal excision specimen in 462 operated and analyzed surgeries was complete (77%) and nearly complete (16.5%) in 93.5%of the cases. Negative circumferential radial margin was observed in 90% of the overall group (87.9% laparoscopic resection and 92.3%open resection; P = .11). Distal margin result was negative in more than 98%of patients irrespective of type of surgery (P = .91). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Among patients with stage II or III rectal cancer, the use of laparoscopic resection compared with open resection failed to meet the criterion for noninferiority for pathologic outcomes. Pending clinical oncologic outcomes, the findings do not support the use of laparoscopic resection in these patients. TRIAL REGISTRATION clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00726622
The clinical value of these markers is that the patients at a high predicted risk of relapse (13-fold risk) could be upstaged to receive adjuvant therapy, similar to Dukes' C patients. Our data highlight the feasibility of a prognostic assay that could focus more intensive treatment for localized colon cancer.
Laparoscopic assisted resection of rectal cancer was not found to be significantly different to OPEN resection of rectal cancer based on the outcomes of DFS and recurrence.
Retrorectal tumors remain a diagnostic and therapeutic challenge. Pain, male gender, and advanced age increase the likelihood of malignancy. Various imaging modalities are useful for planning resection but cannot establish a definitive diagnosis. Whereas benign retrorectal tumors can be completely resected, curative resection of malignant retrorectal tumors remains difficult.
).Roughly 150,000 stomas are created in the United States annually, equally divided between ileostomies and colostomies.1 When created properly, an ileostomy or colostomy can dramatically improve a patient's quality of life. Patients with a good functioning stoma can expect to live a normal life with very few lifestyle restrictions. In contrast, when a patient develops complications related to their stoma, the impact on their physical and mental health can be irreparable. Stomas can be created for a multitude of diseases such as colorectal cancer, ulcerative colitis, Crohn's disease, diverticulitis, ischemic colitis, radiation injury, and fecal incontinence. The associated morbidity and overall function of a stoma are dependent upon the indication for the stoma, whether it was created electively or emergently, and patient factors such as body habitus and prior surgery. Unfortunately, significant morbidity is associated with stoma creation and these complications can be grouped into early and late-occurring complications. The literature reports the rate of stoma-related complications ranging from 20 to 70%.2-7 Early complications occur within the first 30 days of the stoma creation and include ischemia/necrosis, retraction, mucocutaneous separation, and parastomal abscess. Late complications include parastomal hernia, prolapse, retraction, and varices. All of these complications will be discussed to better understand etiologies and management options. Risk Factors for Stoma-Related ComplicationsAs mentioned previously, stoma creation carries significant morbidity, and disease, patient, clinical, and stoma-specific factors influence the outcomes pertaining to their creation. Harris et al found the most common stoma-related complications in 345 ostomates were herniation, retraction, necrosis, infection, prolapse, stenosis, fistula, and small bowel obstruction (SBO). 4 Complications were more common with colostomies except for SBO, which were more prevalent with ileostomies. The authors also found that loop colostomies had the highest complication rate out of all stoma configurations. Postoperative stoma necrosis was strongly and significantly associated with emergency stoma creation. Parmar et al identified that colostomies, short stoma length, body mass index > 30, emergency surgery, and lack of preoperative marking were associated with increased risks of complications. 7 None of the identified studies was adequately powered to stratify postoperative stoma-related complication rates by specific disease processes. Parastomal HerniaParastomal hernias are incisional hernias at ostomy sites and are believed to be an inevitable consequence of having an Keywords ► parastomal hernia ► stoma prolapse ► colostomy ► ileostomy ► parastomal varices AbstractWhen created properly, an ileostomy or colostomy can dramatically improve a patient's quality of life. Conversely, when a patient develops complications related to their stoma, the impact on physical and mental health can be profound. Unfortunately, significant morbidity is...
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