Abstract
AimTo investigate whether intramesocolic plane dissection assessed on fresh specimens by the pathologist is a risk factor for recurrence after complete mesocolic excision for sigmoid cancer when compared with mesocolic plane dissection.MethodSingle‐centre study based on prospectively registered data on patients undergoing resection for UICC stage I–III sigmoid colon adenocarcinoma during the period 2010–2017. The patients were stratified into either an intramesocolic plane group or a mesocolic plane group. Primary outcome was risk of recurrence after 4.2 years using inverse probability treatment weighting and competing risk analyses.ResultsOf a total of 332 patients, two were excluded as the specimen was assessed as muscularis propria plane, 237 (72%) specimens were deemed as mesocolic and 93 (28%) as intramesocolic. The 4.2‐year cumulative incidence of recurrence after inverse probability treatment weighting was 14.9% (10.4–19.3) in the mesocolic group compared with 9.4% (3.7–15.0) in the intramesocolic group, thus the absolute risk difference between the mesocolic plane and intramesocolic plane was 5.5% (−12.5–1.6; p = 0.13) in favour of the intramesocolic group.ConclusionIntramesocolic plane dissection was not a risk factor for recurrence after complete mesocolic excision for sigmoid cancer when compared with mesocolic plane dissection. No difference in risk of local recurrence, death before recurrence, and in overall survival after 4.2 years was observed between the two groups. With less than 1% of the specimens deemed as muscularis propria plane dissection, the classification appears unusable for the risk prediction of sigmoid colon cancer.
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More From: Colorectal disease : the official journal of the Association of Coloproctology of Great Britain and Ireland
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