| Literature DB >> 22312530 |
Abstract
Proper indications for second-look surgery in patients with colorectal cancer have always been a controversial subject. The surgical literature suggests benefit in a reoperation, where a limited extent of cancer is discovered and then resected with negative margins. However, patients are often subjected to a negative exploratory laparotomy or an intervention that is unable to achieve an R-0 resection; in these circumstances, little or no benefit occurs. Unfortunately, an unsuccessful repeat intervention may place the patient in a worse condition, especially if morbidity occurs. This paper seeks to identify the clinical parameters of a primary colorectal cancer and a followup plan that are associated with cancer recurrence that can be definitively addressed by the second look surgery. New surgical technologies, including cytoreductive surgery with peritonectomy and perioperative intraperitoneal chemotherapy with hyperthermia, are suggested for use in this group of patients. This new management strategy used in patients with local-regional recurrence may result in a high proportion of patients converted from a second-look positive patient to a long-term survivor.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 22312530 PMCID: PMC3263683 DOI: 10.1155/2011/915078
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Surg Oncol ISSN: 2090-1402
Second-look surgery in patients with cancer of the colon (reprinted from [6] with permission).
| Second-look negative | Second-look positive | Symptomatic look | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Number of patients | 62 | 36 | 47 |
| Operative deaths | 2– 3.2%* | 6–17% | 7–15% |
| Recurrent cancer† | 12–19% | 24–67% | 33–70% |
| Living and well, last look negative | 41 | 4 | 4 |
| Living and well, last look positive | — | 0 | 3 |
| Living with residual | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| Dead from other than cancer | 10 | 2 | 0 |
| Total converted | — | 6–17% | 7–15% |
*One patient had residual cancer and died at fifth look.
†Considered failures in negative-look group.
Figure 1Ring diagram shows that hematogenous metastases and cancer seeding can occur in isolation or in combination with other sites of surgical treatment failure. High-density seeding at the resection site causes a layering of cancer; low-density seeding at a distance results in peritoneal carcinomatosis (reprinted from [18] with permission).
Patients with primary colorectal cancer identified to be at high risk for local-regional recurrence and/or peritoneal carcinomatosis.
| (1) Visible evidence of peritoneal carcinomatosis. | |
| (2) Ovarian cysts showing adenocarcinoma suggested to be of gastrointestinal origin. | |
| (3) Positive cytology either before or after cancer resection. | |
| (4) Adjacent organ involvement or cancer-induced fistula. | |
| (5) Obstructed cancer. | |
| (6) Perforated cancer. | |
| (7) T3 mucinous cancer. | |
| (8) T4 cancer or a positive “touch prep” of the primary cancer. | |
| (9) Cancer mass ruptured with the resection. | |
| (10) Positive lateral margins of excision. |
Ineligibility requirements in patients considered for second-look surgery.
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| Liver metastases >4 |
| Performance status >2 |
| Serious medical condition |
| Renal failure with creatinine >3 |
| Cardiac failure with ejection fraction <50% |
| Malnutrition |
| Radiologic study showing systemic disease |
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| Obesity |
| Low rectal cancer |
| Intestinal obstruction from progressive cancer or a long interval |
| between cancer recurrence and second look |
Figure 2Algorithm for a planned second look in patients at high risk for local-regional cancer recurrence. CEA: carcinoembryonic antigen; CRS: cytoreductive surgery; HIPEC: hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy.
Endpoints of revised guidelines for second-look surgery.
| Credits | Debits |
|---|---|
| (1) Percentage of patients “converted” from disease recurrence to five-year survival. | (1) Percentage of patients with a negative second look. |
| (2) Median time to recurrence and median survival of patients with a positive second look who are resected. | (2) Morbidity and mortality of patients with a negative second look. |
| (3) Median time to recurrence and median survival of patients with a positive second look who are unresectable. | (3) Morbidity and mortality of patients with a positive second look. |
| (4) Cost of reoperative surgery. | |
| (5) Cost of followup program. |