Abstract

BackgroundColorectal anastomosis using the double stapling technique (DST) has become a standard procedure. However, DST is difficult to perform in patients with anal stenosis because a circular stapler cannot be inserted into the rectum through the anus. Thus, an alternative procedure is required for colorectal anastomosis.Case presentationA 78-year-old woman presented with bloody stool. Colonoscopy and computed tomography revealed advanced low rectal cancer without lymph node or distant metastasis. We initially planned to perform low anterior resection using a double stapling technique or transanal hand-sewn anastomosis, but this would have been too difficult due to anal stenosis and fibrosis caused by a Milligan-Morgan hemorrhoidectomy performed 20 years earlier. The patient had never experienced defecation problems and declined a stoma. Therefore, we inserted an anvil into the rectal stump and fixed it robotically with a purse-string suture followed by insertion of the shaft of the circular stapler from the sigmoidal side. In this way, side-to-end anastomosis was accomplished laparoscopically. The distance from the anus to the anastomosis was 5 cm. The patient was discharged with no anastomotic leakage. Robotic assistance proved extremely useful for low anterior resection with side-to-end anastomosis.ConclusionPerforming side-to-end anastomosis with robotic assistance was extremely useful in this patient with rectal cancer and anal stenosis.

Highlights

  • Colorectal anastomosis using the double stapling technique (DST) has become a standard procedure

  • DST is difficult to perform in patients with benign anal stenosis because a circular stapler cannot be inserted into the rectum through the anus

  • Tajima et al World Journal of Surgical Oncology (2021) 19:14 been difficult to perform because of anal stenosis and fibrosis caused by a Milligan-Morgan hemorrhoidectomy performed 20 years earlier

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Summary

Background

Colorectal anastomosis using the double stapling technique (DST) has become a standard procedure because it is technically easy to perform and has low risk of contamination. DST is difficult to perform in patients with benign anal stenosis because a circular stapler cannot be inserted into the rectum through the anus. In this situation, an alternative procedure is. We planned to insert an anvil into the rectal stump intracorporeally and perform side-toend anastomosis. After the staple line of the rectal stump was resected, a purse-string suture was hand-sewn robotically using 2-0 PROLENE. The anvil was inserted into the rectal stump and fixed with robotic assistance (Fig. 1). The sigmoidal stump was resected robotically using a linear stapler to construct a 3-cm blind end (Fig. 4). Neither recurrence nor problems with defecation including “low anterior resection syndrome” have been noted in the 5 months since surgery

Discussion
Findings
Funding None
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