Abstract

BackgroundCircumferential resection margin is considered an important prognostic parameter after rectal cancer surgery, but its impact might have changed because of improved surgical quality and tailored multimodality treatment. The aim of this systematic review was to determine the prognostic importance of circumferential resection margin involvement based on the most recent literature. MethodsA systematic literature search of MEDLINE, Embase, and the Cochrane Library was performed for studies published between January 2006 and May 2019. Studies were included if 3- or 5-year oncological outcomes were reported depending on circumferential resection margin status. Outcome parameters were local recurrence, overall survival, disease-free survival, and distant metastasis rate. The Newcastle Ottawa Scale and Jadad score were used for quality assessment of the studies. Meta-analysis was performed using a random effects model and reported as a pooled odds ratio or hazard ratio with 95% confidence interval. ResultsSeventy-five studies were included, comprising a total of 85,048 rectal cancer patients. Significant associations between circumferential resection margin involvement and all long-term outcome parameters were uniformly found, with varying odds ratios and hazard ratios depending on circumferential resection margin definition (<1 mm, ≤1 mm, otherwise), neoadjuvant treatment, study period, and geographical origin of the studies. ConclusionCircumferential resection margin involvement has remained an independent, poor prognostic factor for local recurrence and survival in most recent literature, indicating that circumferential resection margin status can still be used as a short-term surrogate endpoint.

Highlights

  • Circumferential resection margin (CRM) is generally considered to be an important prognostic factor after rectal cancer resection, despite controversy about the definition of CRM involvement.[1]

  • The systematic search resulted in 652 unique articles eligible for title and abstract screening, which resulted in 323 articles suitable for full-text review

  • Considering geographical origin, 25 studies originated from Asia,24,27,30,34,36,41,42,45e47,53,54,57,59,70,74,76,77,81e84,88e90 and 50 studies originated from the West16e23,25,26,28,29,31e33,35,37e40, 43,44,48e52,55,56,58,60e69,71e73,75,78e80,85e87 (Table I)

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Summary

Introduction

Circumferential resection margin (CRM) is generally considered to be an important prognostic factor after rectal cancer resection, despite controversy about the definition of CRM involvement.[1]. Circumferential resection margin is considered an important prognostic parameter after rectal cancer surgery, but its impact might have changed because of improved surgical quality and tailored multimodality treatment. Studies were included if 3- or 5-year oncological outcomes were reported depending on circumferential resection margin status. Significant associations between circumferential resection margin involvement and all long-term outcome parameters were uniformly found, with varying odds ratios and hazard ratios depending on circumferential resection margin definition (

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