Transanal excision of rectal carcinoma.

Journal: The American Surgeon
Published:
Abstract

Twenty-two men and 16 women with a mean age of 67 years were treated for rectal carcinoma by transanal excision. Patients presented with rectal bleeding (63%), change in bowel habits (11%), rectal pain (4%), or were asymptomatic and discovered on screening proctosigmoidoscopy (22%). The tumors were located from the anal verge to 8 cm proximally and ranged in size from 1 to 4 cm. Pathologic findings included adenocarcinoma (92%), squamous cell carcinoma (4%), and cloacogenic carcinoma (4%). Postoperative hospitalization averaged two days (0 to 29 days). One patient died of a perioperative myocardial infarction for an operative mortality of 3 per cent. Morbidity was 7 per cent and included urinary retention and pneumonia. Postoperative radiation therapy was administered to 11 patients with either undifferentiated tumors or invasion into the muscularis propria. Follow-up in these 38 patients averaged 30 months. One patient died of metastatic carcinoma, and two patients developed local recurrence that was treated successfully by a low anterior resection or abdominoperineal resection. Transanal excision of rectal carcinoma can be performed in properly selected patients with good overall survival and local control.

Authors
R Frazee, R Patel, M Belew, J Roberts, J Hendricks