Publication | Open Access
Mortality in patients with obstructing colorectal cancer.
42
Citations
15
References
1986
Year
Surgical OncologyGastrointestinal OncologyColorectal SurgeryMedicineGastroenterologyColorectal CancerPerioperative SafetySurgeryFatal Technical ComplicationsOncologyRadiation OncologyPrimary ResectionCancer ResearchColorectal Carcinoma
Of 1,033 patients with colorectal carcinoma, 238 (23%) presented with obstruction. The majority of tumours (74%) were potentially curable (Dukes B/C) at presentation. Tumours situated at the splenic flexure, transverse or descending colon were most likely to obstruct. Perioperative mortality was high following either primary resection (31%) or fashioning of a defunctioning stoma alone (25%) but was twice as high (40%) in patients over 70 than those under 70 (20%). Cardiorespiratory complications accounted for 55% of this mortality, while fatal technical complications occurred in 19%. Sixty seven patients (28%) had two operations, 51 patients (21%) had three operations.
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