ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: A retrospective review is presented of a single institution's experience with multivisceral resections for locally-advanced colorectal cancer. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Twenty-eight patients, who had undergone RO multiorgan resection, were identified from the database of a total of 1150 patients operated on for colorectal carcinoma in the years 1995-2005 at a single center. There were twelve total pelvic exenterations and 16 patients had undergone en bloc primary tumor resection with adherent organs, such as the spleen, diaphragm, pancreas, stomach, kidney, etc. The patients were followed-up according to a standard protocol. RESULTS: The post-operative mortality was 7%, the average follow-up 21.6 months and the 5-year survival 45%. CONCLUSION: Our results confirmed that, in the case of invasion of colorectal cancer to the adjacent intra-abdominal organs or structures, multiorgan resection 'offers the only chance of potentially-curative treatment.
Subject(s)
Colorectal Neoplasms/surgery , Colectomy , Humans , Pancreatectomy , Pelvic Exenteration , Survival RateABSTRACT
A 54-year-old woman was operated for obstructive ileus in 1996. Obstruction was caused by a tumor of the descending colon invading the abdominal wall. Urgent left colectomy with lymphadenectomy was performed. Microscopically six lymphatic nodes were positive. The patient was postoperatively treated with adjuvant chemotherapy. Fifteen months later the patient underwent a resection of central hepatic segments (Couinaud's segment 4,5,8) for metachronous metastasis. At present the patient has no signs of recurrence, she has returned back to her normal life. Despite several unfavorable prognostic factors--obstruction, abdominal wall infiltration, number of positive nodes, short time between primary tumor resection and diagnosis of liver metastasis and centrally located metastasis with satellite lesions, the patient has been surviving for 6 years now.