univariate and multivariate analyses. Further analysis was conducted on patients with AL to identify factors correlated with gravity. Results There were 520 patients representing 64% of LAR for rectal cancer performed by SICCR members. The overall rate of AL was 15.2%. Mortality was 2.7% including 0.6% from AL. The incidence of AL was correlated with higher age (p<0.05), lower (<20 per year) centre case volume (p<0.05), obesity (p<0.05), malnutrition (p<0.01) and intraoperative contamination (p<0.05), and was lower in patients with a colonic J-pouch reservoir (p<0.05). In the multivariate analysis age, malnutrition and intraoperative contamination were independent predictors. The only predictor of severe (grade III/IV) AL was alcohol/smoking habits (p<0.05) while the absence of a diverting stoma was borderline significant (p<0.07). Conclusions Our retrospective survey identified several risk factors for AL. This survey was a necessary step to construct prospective interventional studies and to establish benchmark standards for outcome studies. Keywords Anastomotic leaks · Low anterior resection · Rectal cancer · Outcome studies IntroductionAnastomotic leakage (AL) is the most significant surgical complication following resection for rectal cancer [1], affecting perioperative mortality and possibly longterm survival [2,3]. The rate of AL after anterior resection (AR) varies from 3% to 19% [4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11], being clinically significant in 2.9-15.3% of patients. Mortality following a leak may be 6.0-39.3% [12]. Most of the reports of complications after surgery for colorectal cancer come Abstract Background The aim of the survey was to assess the incidence of anastomotic leaks (AL) and to identify risk factors predicting incidence and gravity of AL after low anterior resection (LAR) for rectal cancer performed by colorectal surgeons of the Italian Society of Colorectal Surgery (SICCR). Methods Information about patients with rectal cancers less than 12 cm from the anal verge who underwent LAR during 2005 was collected retrospectively. AL was classified as grade I to IV according to gravity. Fifteen clinical variables were examined by ing factors predicting the gravity of AL among patients with AL this classification was simplified to mild to moderate (grades 1 and 2) and severe (grades 3 and 4).Categorical variables were evaluated using either Fisher's exact test or Pearson's chi-squared test depending on sample size. Numerical variables were evaluated using Student's t-test. P values <0.05 were considered significant. All variables which were associated with the incidence or gravity of AL in the univariate analysis were entered into a multivariate logistic regression model. Data were analysed using the STATA program (release 8.0, 2003; Stata Corporation, College Station, TX). ResultsOf 108 centres contacted, 44 (40.7%) participated. Information on 682 patients with rectal cancer who had undergone surgery was collected. Sphincter-saving surgery was performed in 579 patients (84.9%). After excluding abdom...
After a long series of studies on the effects of neutron irradiation of 10 B loaded neoplastic cells both in culture and in animal experiments, we started the clinical application of BNCT on humans affected by liver metastases of a radically resected colon adenocarcinoma. The procedure we adopted includes a first surgical phase, with hepatectomy; a radiotherapeutic phase, in which the isolated liver, washed and chilled, is extracorporeally irradiated with thermal neutrons; and then a second surgical phase for the reconnection of the liver to the patient. Until now two patients have been subjected to the BNCT treatment. The first one survived 44 months with a good quality of life, and died because of diffuse recurrences of his intestinal tumour. The second patient had the same early perioperative course, but after 33 days a worsening of a dilatative cardiomyopaty, from which he was suffering, determined a cardiac failure and eventually death. This clinical experience, although limited, has shown that extracorporeal neutron irradiation of the liver is a feasible procedure, able to ensure the complete destruction of liver metastases and a possible long lasting survival. In our patients neutron irradiation caused massive cellular necrosis highly specific to tumour cells, whereas normal cells were mostly spared. Nevertheless, the impact of such a traumatic operation on the patient's organism must be taken into account. Finally, we have to be aware that the fight against tumour rarely leads to a complete victory. We now have an innovative weapon which is both powerful and partly unsettled: it must be refined and above all used.
Advances in carbohydrate sequencing technologies reveal the tremendous complexity of the glycome and the role that glycomics might have to bring insight into the biological functions. Carbohydrate-protein interactions, in particular, are known to be crucial to most mammalian physiological processes as mediators of cell adhesion and metastasis, signal transducers, and organizers of protein interactions. An assay is developed here to mimic the multivalency of biological complexes that selectively and sensitively detect carbohydrate-protein interactions. The binding of β-galactosides and galectin-3--a protein that is correlated to the progress of tumor and metastasis--is examined. The efficiency of the assay is related to the expression of the receptor while anchoring to the interaction's strength. Comparative binding experiments reveal molecular binding preferences. This study establishes that the assay is robust to isolate metastatic cells from colon affected patients and paves the way to personalized medicine.
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