| Literature DB >> 30706233 |
Erika Machida1, Yasuyuki Miyakura2, Jun Takahashi1, Sawako Tamaki1, Hideki Ishikawa1, Fumi Hasegawa1, Rina Kikugawa1, Shingo Tsujinaka1, Alan Kawarai Lefor3, Toshiki Rikiyama1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Bevacizumab is an anti-angiogenesis agent used to treat patients with metastatic colorectal cancer and is associated with a variety of complications. We present a patient with rectal cancer who developed a delayed anastomotic leak more than 5 years after undergoing low anterior resection. CASE REPORT: A 78-year-old man with hematochezia was diagnosed with two synchronous rectal cancers 7 years prior to presentation. Preoperative chemo-radiotherapy was given followed by a very low anterior resection. During follow-up, multiple lymph node metastases developed, which were treated with chemotherapy. First-line chemotherapy, capecitabine, oxizaliplatin, and bevacizumab, was given over 3 years, and second-line chemotherapy, capecitabine, irinotecan, and bevacizumab, was administered over a 3-month period. After the last treatment, the patient presented with pneumaturia and fecaluria. Computed tomography scan revealed extraluminal air between the prostate and rectum, adjacent to the anastomotic site. Ulceration and fistula formation were observed on colonoscopy, and contrast radiography demonstrated a fistula at the anastomotic site. An anastomotic-urethral fistula was diagnosed and transverse colostomy was performed.Entities:
Keywords: Bevacizumab; Chemo-radiotherapy; Delayed anastomotic leak; Rectal cancer
Year: 2019 PMID: 30706233 PMCID: PMC6357210 DOI: 10.1186/s40792-019-0573-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Surg Case Rep ISSN: 2198-7793
Fig. 1Computed tomography scan of the abdomen revealed a small amount of extraluminal air between the prostate and rectum, adjacent to the anastomotic site (white arrow)
Fig. 2Ulceration and fistula formation are observed at the site of the colonic anastomosis on colonoscopy
Fig. 3Fistula formation was observed at the anastomotic site after low anterior resection on contrast radiography. Arrow head and arrow indicate fistulae which go to the anterior and posterior side of the anastomosis, respectively. There was no anastomotic-urethral fistula seen on contrast enema
Clinical features of ten patients with delayed anastomotic leak associated with bevacizumab treatment
| Report | Age/gender1 | Primary tumor | Preoperative radiation therapy | Previous history of anastomotic leak | Anastomotic complication | Interval between initial surgery and leak (months) | Duration of bevacizumab treatment | Interval between last bevacizumab dose and leak |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adenis et al. [ | 50/F | Rectum | Yes | Yes | Leak ileovaginal fistula | 22 | 1 month (2 doses) | < 1 month |
| Ley et al. [ | 72/F | Rectum | Yes | No | Leak rectovaginal fistula | 30 | 6 months | < 1 month |
| August et al. [ | 58/M | Rectum | Yes | Yes | Leak | 26 | 6 weeks (3 doses) | Not described |
| August et al. [ | 74/F | Rectum | Yes | No | Leak | 33 | 20 weeks | 4 months |
| Bege et al. [ | 46/M | Rectum | Yes | Yes | Leak | 52 | Not described | 1 week |
| Bege et al. [ | 54/M | Rectum | Yes | Yes | Leak | 57 | Not described | 2 weeks |
| Bege et al. [ | 51/M | Rectum | Yes | No | Leak | 21 | Not described | 2 weeks |
| Borzomati et al. [ | 68/M | Rectum | Yes | Yes | Leak | 33 | 24 weeks | 2 weeks |
| O’Hare et al. [ | 56/F | Rectum | Yes | No | Leak | 17 | 6 weeks (3 doses) | 1 month |
| Present patient | 78/M | Rectum | Yes | No | Leak | 60 | 3 years (26 doses) | 1 month |
1F female, M male
Fig. 4Computed tomography scan 3 months before the patient presented with symptoms of a leak shows a circumferential staple line at the anastomotic site