Abstract

This retrospective study identifies the clinicopathologic factors (age, gender, size of tumor, location, tumor stage, lymph node metastasis, histologic differentiation, and adjuvant therapies) that are useful in predicting long-term survival in patients undergoing total pelvic exenteration for advanced primary rectal cancer. We reviewed the medical records of 71 patients with stage T3 or T4 primary rectal cancer who underwent a curative total pelvic exenteration. The effects of various clinical variables on long-term survival were analyzed. The postoperative mortality, hospital death, and morbidity rates were 1.4, 4.2, and 66.2 percent, respectively. The overall five-year survival rate after total pelvic exenteration was 54.1 percent. The five-year survival rate was 65.7 percent for patients with T3 lesions and 39 percent for patients with T4 lesions. A univariate analysis showed that postoperative survival was affected by age, tumor stage, and lymph node metastasis, while a multivariate analysis showed that age and lymph node metastasis were independent prognostic factors. Total pelvic exenteration may enable long-term survival in younger patients with stage T3 or T4 primary rectal cancer and little or no lymph node metastasis.

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