The standard therapy for rectal carcinoma is surgical, however, preoperative radiochemotherapy will play an increasing role especially in locally advanced disease. To estimate the prognosis and the effect of radiochemotherapy the postradiochemotherapeutical pathological features are important to assess. We examined the surgical specimens of 17 patients after preoperative radiochemotherapy to estimate and grade the histological reactions. A proposal for a grading system for tumor regression (not yet available in the literature) has also been described. All but one of the carcinomas showed different degrees of tumor regression. A total regression was not observed after standardised pathological work up. In only one case a locally curative resection was not possible. We think that preoperative radiochemotherapy is able to reduce tumor mass thus achieving operability in non-curatively operable cases. We recommend standards of pathological work up and regression grading for further studies comparing surgery and radiochemotherapy of rectal carcinoma.
Objective: The aim of the study was to evaluate the expression of tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-a protein in the subcutaneous and visceral adipose tissue in correlation with adipocyte cell volume, serum TNFa, soluble TNF-receptor-2 (sTNFR-2) and indirect parameters of insulin resistance in overweight/obese and lean healthy persons. Design: A cross-sectional case-control study was used. Patients: Twenty-eight overweight/obese probands with normal glucose tolerance (BMI . 27 kg/m 2 ) and 15 lean people (BMI , 25 kg/m 2 ), all of them undergoing planned surgical operation, participated in the study. Methods: Two to four grams of subcutaneous and visceral adipose tissue were removed and studied using semi-quantitative immunohistochemical staining of the TNF-a protein. Serum TNF-a, sTNFR-2 (ELISA) and fasting C-peptide (RIA) were measured. Results: TNF-a protein was expressed in adipocytes of both depots. The expression was evaluated visually and found to be greater in the obese patients. Significantly higher serum TNF-a (5.58^0.87 pg/ml vs 4.21^0.55, mean^S.D., P , 0.01, Mann -Whitney) and sTNFR-2 levels (7.84^3.56 ng/ml vs 4.59^1.35, P ¼ 0.005) were found in the obese subgroup in correlation with the fasting C-peptide level (r ¼ 0.49, P ¼ 0.003; and r ¼ 0.74, P ¼ 0.001) and the C-peptide/ blood glucose ratio (r ¼ 0.47, Spearman, P ¼ 0.005; and r ¼ 0.70, P ¼ 0.001). The cell volume of both adipocyte depots was found to have a significant positive correlation with serum TNF-a and sTNFR-2 levels in the total group of patients (subcutaneous: r ¼ 0.52, P ¼ 0.0003; r ¼ 0.69, P , 0.0001; visceral: r ¼ 0.65, P , 0.0001; r ¼ 0.63, P , 0.0001) and in both subgroups. Conclusions: Adipocyte cell volume of both the subcutaneous and visceral fat depots may be determinants of TNF-a, sTNFR-2 production and obesity-linked insulin resistance.
Assessment of lymphatic spread is an important factor in staging rectal cancer. Knowledge of the presumed number and size of metastases present is essential before assessment of the accuracy of preoperative visualization of node metastases can be undertaken. We examined the lymph nodes of 196 patients with rectal carcinoma. Among 4985 lymph nodes, 586 metastases were found. Ninety-eight patients had metastases in pararectal nodes and in nodes along the superior rectal artery. These nodes are potentially visible by ultrasound. In 31 of these patients (32%), all metastases were 5 mm or less and in 8 cases (8%) 2 mm or less. These small nodes are difficult to see on ultrasound. We also found significant relationships between depth of invasion, grade of differentiation and lymphatic spread. These data suggest that a careful histological search for small metastases should be undertaken to avoid false-negative lymph node findings.
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