Prior Abdominal Surgery Jeopardizes Quality of Resection in Colorectal Cancer

被引:4
|
作者
Stommel, Martijn W. J. [1 ]
de Wilt, Johannes H. W. [1 ]
ten Broek, Richard P. G. [1 ]
Strik, Chema [1 ]
Rovers, Maroeska M. [2 ]
van Goor, Harry [1 ]
机构
[1] Radboud Univ Nijmegen, Med Ctr, Dept Surg, POB 9101, NL-6500 HB Nijmegen, Netherlands
[2] Radboud Univ Nijmegen, Med Ctr, Dept Operating Rooms & Hlth Evidence, POB 9101, NL-6500 HB Nijmegen, Netherlands
关键词
COLON-CANCER; ABDOMINOPERINEAL EXCISION; MARGIN INVOLVEMENT; PELVIC-SURGERY; ADHESIONS; IMPACT; OBSTRUCTION; SURVIVAL; RISK;
D O I
10.1007/s00268-015-3390-0
中图分类号
R61 [外科手术学];
学科分类号
摘要
Prior abdominal surgery increases complexity of abdominal operations. Effort to prevent injury during adhesiolysis might result in less extensive bowel resection in colorectal cancer surgery. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of prior abdominal surgery on the outcome of colorectal cancer surgery. A nationwide prospective database of patients with primary colorectal cancer resection in The Netherlands between 2010 and 2012 was reviewed for histopathology, morbidity and mortality in patients with compared to patients without prior abdominal surgery. 9042 patients with and 17,679 without prior abdominal surgery were analyzed. After prior abdominal surgery 20.7 % had less than 10 lymph nodes in the histopathological specimen compared to 17.8 % without prior abdominal surgery (adjusted OR 1.17, 95 % CI 1.09-1.26). Adjusted ORs for less than 10 and 12 lymph nodes were significant in colon cancer resection and not in rectal cancer resection. Subgroups of patients who had previous hepatobiliary surgery or other abdominal surgery had a higher incidence of inadequate number of harvested lymph nodes. Prior colorectal surgery increased the percentage of positive circumferential rectal resection margin by 64 % (12.5 and 7.6 %; adjusted OR 1.70, 95 % CI 1.21-2.39). For colon cancer morbidity was significantly higher in patients with prior surgery (33.2 and 29.7 %; adjusted OR 1.18, 95 % CI 1.10-1.26), 30-day mortality was comparable (4.7 % prior surgery and 3.8 % without prior surgery; adjusted OR 1.01, 95 % CI 0.88-1.17). Prior abdominal surgery compromises the quality of resection and increases postoperative morbidity in patients with primary colorectal cancer.
引用
收藏
页码:1246 / 1254
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Impact of Prior Abdominal Surgery on Curative Resection of Colon Cancer via Minilaparotomy
    Ishida, Hideyuki
    Ishiguro, Tohru
    Ishibashi, Keiichiro
    Ohsawa, Tomonori
    Kuwabara, Kouki
    Okada, Norimichi
    Miyazaki, Tatsuya
    SURGERY TODAY, 2011, 41 (03) : 369 - 376
  • [2] Laparoscopic Colorectal Surgery in Patients with Prior Abdominal Surgery
    Fukunaga, Yosuke
    Kameyama, Masao
    Kawasaki, Masayasu
    Takemura, Masashi
    Fujiwara, Yushi
    DIGESTIVE SURGERY, 2011, 28 (01) : 22 - 28
  • [3] Impact of prior abdominal surgery on curative resection of colon cancer via minilaparotomy
    Hideyuki Ishida
    Tohru Ishiguro
    Keiichiro Ishibashi
    Tomonori Ohsawa
    Kouki Kuwabara
    Norimichi Okada
    Tatsuya Miyazaki
    Surgery Today, 2011, 41 : 369 - 376
  • [4] Impact of prior abdominal surgery on short-term outcomes following laparoscopic colorectal cancer surgery: a propensity score-matched analysis
    Sueda, Toshinori
    Tei, Mitsuyoshi
    Nishida, Kentaro
    Yoshikawa, Yukihiro
    Matsumura, Tae
    Koga, Chikato
    Miyagaki, Hiromichi
    Tsujie, Masanori
    Akamaru, Yusuke
    Hasegawa, Junichi
    SURGICAL ENDOSCOPY AND OTHER INTERVENTIONAL TECHNIQUES, 2022, 36 (06): : 4429 - 4441
  • [5] Impact of previous abdominal surgery on the outcome of laparoscopic resection for colorectal cancer: a case-control study in 756 patients
    Zeng, Wei-gen
    Liu, Meng-jia
    Zhou, Zhi-xiang
    Hou, Hui-rong
    Liang, Jian-wei
    Wang, Zheng
    Zhang, Xing-mao
    Hu, Jun-jie
    JOURNAL OF SURGICAL RESEARCH, 2015, 199 (02) : 345 - 350
  • [6] Asymptomatic primary tumour in incurable metastatic colorectal cancer: is there a role for surgical resection prior to systematic therapy or not?
    Samalavicius, Narimantas E.
    Dulskas, Audrius
    Baltruskeviciene, Edita
    Smailyte, Giedre
    Skuciene, Marija
    Mikelenaite, Rasa
    Venslovaite, Rasa
    Aleknavicius, Eduardas
    Samalavicius, Almantas
    Lunevicius, Raimundas
    VIDEOSURGERY AND OTHER MINIINVASIVE TECHNIQUES, 2016, 11 (04) : 274 - 282
  • [7] The impact of previous abdominal surgery on colorectal cancer patients undergoing laparoscopic surgery
    Liu, Xu-Rui
    Zhang, Bing-Lan
    Peng, Dong
    Liu, Fei
    Li, Zi-Wei
    Wang, Chun-Yi
    UPDATES IN SURGERY, 2024, 76 (04) : 1331 - 1338
  • [8] Nonresectional palliative abdominal surgery for patients with advanced colorectal cancer
    Mann, C. D.
    Norwood, M. G. A.
    Miller, A. S.
    Hemingway, D.
    COLORECTAL DISEASE, 2010, 12 (10) : 1039 - 1043
  • [9] Laparoscopic colorectal cancer resection: examining lymph nodes or standardizing surgery?
    Hottenrott, Christof
    Katsios, Christos
    SURGICAL ENDOSCOPY AND OTHER INTERVENTIONAL TECHNIQUES, 2010, 24 (11): : 2921 - 2923
  • [10] Patient characteristics and hospital quality for colorectal cancer surgery
    Zhang, Wei
    Ayanian, John Z.
    Zaslavsky, Alan M.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR QUALITY IN HEALTH CARE, 2007, 19 (01) : 11 - 20