The clinicopathological characteristics and outcome of splenic flexure cancer after surgery have yet to be fully elucidated. The aim of the current study was, therefore, to establish predictive factors related to splenic flexure cancer and outcome after surgery. We compared the clinicopathological characteristics and outcome of 34 patients with splenic flexure cancers (which represents 3.7% of the total number of colon cancers in our series) with those of 418 patients with right colon and 475 patients with left colon cancers by univariate and multivariate analyses, using logistic regression analysis and Cox's proportional hazards model. Splenic flexure cancers had a high risk of obstruction (26.5% of patients), and had a more advanced stage and lower cure rate than left colon cancers. Logistic regression analysis revealed that two independent factors, colonic obstruction and the presence of distant metastases, were related to the splenic flexure tumor site. Splenic flexure cancer patients had a poorer outcome than those with left colon cancer (P = 0.0361). However, there was no difference in survival between patients with splenic flexure, those with right colon cancer and those with left colon cancer who underwent curative surgery. Cox's regression analysis revealed that neither the site of splenic flexure nor colonic obstruction was an independent prognostic factor. In conclusion, splenic flexure cancer is characterized by a high risk of obstruction and the presence of distant metastases. However, after curative resection, splenic flexure cancer has a similar outcome to colon cancer at other sites. In addition, neither the splenic flexure site nor colonic obstruction had an independent influence on patient survival after surgery.
To clarify the relationship between morphological measurements of hepatic volume by computed tomography (CT-vol) and functional volume (RI-vol) by technetium-99m galactosyl human serum albumin (99mTc-GSA) scintigraphy, and its clinical significance, we examined 16 patients with a background liver status of either normal liver function (n=4), chronic hepatitis or cirrhosis (n=7), or obstructive jaundice (n=5). In five patients who underwent preoperative portal vein embolization (PVE), volumetric measurement was performed 2 weeks after PVE. The mean values of CT-vol and RI-vol of the right lobe were 692+/-147 cm3 (66.1+/-10.7%) and 668+/-159 cm3 (67.8+/-13.2%), respectively, and those of the left lobe were 329+/-138 cm3 (33.9+/-10.6%) and 328+/- 170 cm3 (32.2+/-13.2%), respectively. There were no significant differences in the volume measurements between the two volumetric techniques. Correlations between CT-vol and RI-vol in the right and left lobes were positive and significant (r=0.912 and 0.903, respectively; both P's<0.001). The mean values of post-PVE CT-vol and RI-vol of the right lobe in five patients were significantly different (628+/-149 and 456+/-211 cm3, respectively; P=0.033). However, the mean values of post-PVE CT-vol and RI-vol of the left lobe were not different (496+/-124 and 483+/-129 cm3, respectively). We propose that volumetric measurement by 99mTc-GSA scintigraphy is useful for detecting changes in functional volume of individual lobes of the liver and is a more dynamic method compared with detection of morphological changes by CT scan.
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