Abstract

A review of advancement of rectal cancer surgery in Japan is presented. The standard operation for rectal cancer was altered in the 1960s from abdominoperineal resection to the pull-through technique and the handsewn anterior resection in the 1970s, and it became the stapled anterior resection in the 1980s. Today, more than 75 percent of rectal cancers are treated with sphincter-preserving anterior resections, and the remaining 20 percent by abdominoperineal resections. Colonic J-pouch is used with anastomoses involving very low anterior rectal resection for cancers. In the late 1970s, a method of dissecting extended pelvic nodes was adopted to decrease local recurrence. However, extended dissection has been applied to only T3 and T4 cancers of the lower rectum because of postoperative dysfunction of pelvic organs. This was caused by injury to the pelvic nerve plexus, thus lowering the quality of life of the patients. Since the middle of the 1980s, the autonomic nerve-preserving operation attracted surgeons' attention because it prevented these dysfunctions from occurring as a result of the treatment of cancer in the upper rectum and for T1 or T2 cancers in the lower rectum. In this article, recent advances in rectal cancer surgery in Japan are reviewed.

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