Colorectal cancer surgery: Difference between revisions
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==Overview== | ==Overview== | ||
Surgery remains the primary treatment while chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy may be recommended depending on the individual patient's staging and other medical factors. | |||
==Surgery== | ==Surgery== |
Revision as of 20:01, 9 December 2011
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Editor(s)-in-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S.,M.D. [1] Phone:617-632-7753; Elliot B. Tapper, M.D., Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center
Overview
Surgery remains the primary treatment while chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy may be recommended depending on the individual patient's staging and other medical factors.
Surgery
Surgeries can be categorised into curative, palliative, bypass, fecal diversion, or open-and-close.
Curative Surgical treatment can be offered if the tumor is localized.
- Very early cancer that develops within a polyp can often be cured by removing the polyp (i.e., polypectomy) at the time of colonoscopy.
- In colon cancer, a more advanced tumor typically requires surgical removal of the section of colon containing the tumor with sufficient margins, and radical en-bloc resection of mesentery and lymph nodes to reduce local recurrence (i.e., colectomy). If possible, the remaining parts of colon are anastomosed together to create a functioning colon. In cases when anastomosis is not possible, a stoma (artificial orifice) is created.
- Curative surgery on rectal cancer includes total mesorectal excision (lower anterior resection) or abdominoperineal excision.
In case of multiple metastases, palliative (non curative) resection of the primary tumor is still offered in order to reduce further morbidity caused by tumor bleeding, invasion, and its catabolic effect. Surgical removal of isolated liver metastases is, however, common and may be curative in selected patients; improved chemotherapy has increased the number of patients who are offered surgical removal of isolated liver metastases.
If the tumor invaded into adjacent vital structures which makes excision technically difficult, the surgeons may prefer to bypass the tumor (ileotransverse bypass) or to do a proximal fecal diversion through a stoma.
The worst case would be an open-and-close surgery, when surgeons find the tumor unresectable and the small bowel involved; any more procedures would do more harm than good to the patient. This is uncommon with the advent of laparoscopy and better radiological imaging. Most of these cases formerly subjected to "open and close" procedures are now diagnosed in advance and surgery avoided.
Laparoscopic-assisted colectomy is a minimally-invasive technique that can reduce the size of the incision, minimize the risk of infection, and reduce post-operative pain.
Cleveland Clinic colorectal surgeons developed the “no touch” technique to prevent the spread of cancer cells during colorectal surgery.[1]
As with any surgical procedure, colorectal surgery may result in complications including
- wound infection, Dehiscence (bursting of wound) or hernia
- anastomosis breakdown, leading to abscess or fistula formation, and/or peritonitis
- bleeding with or without hematoma formation
- adhesions resulting in bowel obstruction (especially small bowel)
- blind loop syndrome as in bypass surgery.
- adjacent organ injury; most commonly to the small intestine, ureters, spleen, or bladder
- Cardiorespiratory complications such as myocardial infarction, pneumonia, arrythmia, pulmonary embolism etc