Abstract

Scope of specialtyColorectal surgery encompasses any procedure performed on the colon and/or rectum. This section focuses on rectal surgery, specifically regarding surgery for rectal cancer and its technical complexity and disease complexity that often requires a multidisciplinary team-based approach. The emergence of rectal cancer surgical specialists exhibits improvements in rectal cancer outcomes.Colorectal surgery fellowships are available for general surgeons who desire specialization. Roughly 70 colorectal surgery fellowship programs exist, of which 39 are accredited by the National Accreditation Program for Rectal Cancer (NAPRC). Patient care and quality outcomesThe OSTRiCh (Optimizing the Surgical Treatment of Rectal Cancer) Consortium (OC) and NAPRC developed guidelines for a standardized pathway for rectal cancer care and outline standards for patient care and performance indicators. These efforts focus on the recognition of disparities in rectal cancer outcomes, a system for improvement, delivery of quality care, and optimizing patient results by minimizing morbidity and mortality. Regulatory requirementsIn the United States, Board certification for surgeons performing colorectal surgery is granted by the American Board of Colon and Rectal Surgery (ABCRS). While the United States lags behind its European counterparts in development of rectal cancer quality measures, significant changes have been made to close the gap. Improvement initiatives launched by the OC implemented a myriad of quality metrics for longitudinal outcome tracking; surgical site infection, positive circumferential margin rate, rate of colostomy creation, recurrence rate, to name a few.

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