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A 10-year prospective audit of outcome of surgical treatment for colorectal carcinoma
48
Citations
19
References
1995
Year
Surgical OncologyColorectal SurgeryGastroenterologyOpen ProcedureVisceral SurgerySurgeryCurative SurgeryColorectal CarcinomaClinical LeaksOncologyGastrointestinal OncologySurgical TreatmentRadiation OncologyCancer ResearchPrimary TumoursColorectal CancerOutcomes Research10-Year Prospective AuditMedicine
The outcome of 555 patients who underwent surgery under the care of a surgeon with an interest in colorectal disease was examined prospectively over a 10-year period with no exclusions. There was a 4.7 percent incidence of clinical leaks (10 percent for anterior resection) and an overall corrected 10-year survival rate after curative surgery of 58, 59 and 48 percent for right colonic, left colonic and rectal tumours respectively. The incidence of isolated local recurrence was 8 percent after curative surgery for carcinoma of the rectum. Twenty-five percent of patients with rectal tumours required abdominoperineal excision. Patients who underwent curative abdominoperineal excision of the rectum had corrected 5- and 10-year survival rates of 48 and 36 percent, compared with 60 and 58 percent respectively for curative anterior resection. The perioperative mortality rate of those undergoing palliative surgery was 8 percent, and 75 percent died within 2 years from distant and not local disease. A policy of always attempting resection was validated by the fact that 99 percent of primary tumours were removed with a low perioperative mortality rate (4 percent overall), a high curative resection rate and a low morbidity rate.
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