Anus-Preserving Surgery in Advanced Low-Lying Rectal Cancer: A Perspective on Oncological Safety of Intersphincteric Resection
Abstract
:Simple Summary
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Anatomy of the Deep Pelvis
2.1. Posterior Anatomy
2.2. Anterior Anatomy
2.3. Lateral Anatomy
3. Definition of ISR
4. Indication of ISR
5. Distal Resection Margin and ISR
6. Circumferential Resection Margin and ISR
7. Neoadjuvant CRT and ISR
8. Surgical Approach: Open vs. Laparoscopic vs. Robotic
9. Risk Factors for Oncological Outcomes after ISR
10. ISR vs. APR
11. Patterns of LR after ISR
12. Considerations on Functional Outcomes after ISR
13. Learning Curve and Surgical Education on ISR
14. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
AB | Anterior bundle of the longitudinal muscle |
AC | Anal canal |
ACL | Anococcygeal ligament |
AM | Anal margin |
APR | Abdominoperineal resection |
AV | Anal verge |
BM | Bulbospongiosus muscle |
CAA | Coloanal anastomosis |
CEA | Carcinoembryonic antigen |
CI | Confidence interval |
CM | Circumferential muscle |
CRM | Circumferential margin |
CSP | Corpus spongiosum of the penis |
CT | Adjuvant chemotherapy |
Cx | Coccyx |
DFS | Disease free survival |
DK | Dukes stage |
DL | Dentate line |
DM | Distant metastases |
DRE | Digital rectal examination |
DRM | Distal resection margin |
EAS | External anal sphincter |
ECOG PS | Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group scale of Performance Status |
ESR | External sphincter resection |
EUS | Endoscopic ultrasound |
FU | Follow-up |
HL | Hiatal ligament |
HR | Hazard ratio |
JSCCR | Japanese Society for Cancer of the Colon and Rectum |
IAS | Internal anal sphincter |
ISG | Intersphincteric groove |
ISP | intersphincteric plane |
ISR | Intersphincteric resection |
LAM | Levator ani muscle |
LISR | Laparoscopic intersphincteric resection |
LM | Longitudinal muscle |
LN | Lymph node |
LR | Local recurrence |
LRC | Low rectal cancer |
LRFS | Local recurrence free survival |
MRI | Magnetic resonance imaging |
nCRT | Neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy |
OISR | Open intersphincteric resection |
OR | Odds ratio |
OS | Overall survival |
PL | Parks’ ligament |
PR | Prostate |
RFS | Relapse free survival |
RIP | Raphe of the iliococcygeus and pubococcygeus muscle |
RISR | Robotic intersphincteric resection |
RS | Urethral rhabdosphincter |
RT | Radiotherapy |
RU | Rectourethralis muscle |
RVS | Rectovaginal septum |
SP | Single port |
TILME | Total intersphincteric longitudinal muscle excision |
TME | Total mesorectal excision |
UR | Urethra |
VM | Vaginal smooth muscle layer |
AB | Anterior bundle of the longitudinal muscle |
AC | Anal canal |
ACL | Anococcygeal ligament |
AM | Anal margin |
APR | Abdominoperineal resection |
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Authors, Year | Indications | Contraindications |
---|---|---|
Schiessel, 1994–2012 [18,19,39] | -T1–T3 LRC -Tumor diameter >1 cm -Big villous adenomas -Mucosectomy/RT residual tumors -Low carcinoids/hemangiomas | -Undifferentiated tumors -EAS infiltration -T4 stage -Preoperative insufficient sphincter function -Distant metastases |
Vorobiev, 2004 [58] | T2–3 (EUS) Well/moderately diff. adenoca. Fecal continence | -EAS/LAM infiltration -N+ (EUS) -M+ |
Rullier, 2005 [45] | -≤4.5 cm AV -Distant metastases | -EAS/LAM infiltration -Fixed tumors (except partial vaginal fixity) -Fecal incontinence > 6 months before diagnosis |
Hohenberger, 2005 [46] | -≥0.5 cm from DL (rectoscopy) -T1–2 (EUS) -T3 (above puborectal sling) -G1–2 -Patients with possibly distinct invasion of the pelvic floor musculature underwent prior nCRT | -EAS infiltration -Fecal incontinence |
Chin, 2006 [47] | -T2 -T3–4 (after nCRT) -≤5 cm (maximal diameter) -1–3 cm from DL | -Distant metastases |
Chamlou, 2007 [48] | -T1–3 -T4 if invasion is distant from the tumor’s lowest part/sphincter, and is resectable -Resectable distant metastases -uT1 with adverse pathologic features after transanal local excision | -EAS/LAM infiltration -Fecal incontinence |
Krand, 2009 [59] | -(Study on ISR with partial IAS) -Distal excision at the DL or 1–2 mm distal to it -T2–3 -Well/moderately diff. adenoca. | -Total IAS for achieving acceptable DRM -Fecal incontinence -EAS/LAM infiltration -Poorly diff. adenoca. -Distant metastases (except resectable liver metastases) |
Han, 2009 [60] | -T1–2 (IAS) -T1-T2 after nCRT -Tumor diameter > 1 cm but <5 cm -Well/moderately diff. adenoca. -Sufficient anal function (DRE, manometry) | -Infiltration of pelvic floor -Tumor diameter > 5 cm -Poorly diff. adenoca. -Insufficient anal function (DRE, manometry) -Distant metastases -Intestinal obstruction |
Kuo, 2011 [62] | -T1–3 | -Infiltration EAS/LAR (even if submitted to nCRT with radiological clearance) |
Martin, 2012 [69] (Review) | -≤1 cm from anorectal ring | -T4 tumors -EAS/LAM infiltration -Fixed tumors at DRE -Poorly diff. adenoca. -Fecal incontinence -Distant metastases |
Tokoro, 2013 [52] | -T1–3 -Resectable metastases | -T4 tumors -Poorly diff. adenoca. -Infiltrating gross appearance -Fecal incontinence |
Akagi, 2013 [53] | -T1–3 (mobile tumors) -≤4 cm from AV -Well/moderately diff. adenoca. -ECOG PS 0–2 -Good anal function | -T4 tumor -Fixed tumors -Untreatable distant metastases -Poorly diff. adenoca. -Psychiatric disease -Poor anal function (no discernable tone at DRE or the maximum squeeze pressure < 50 mmHg before operation) -Liver cirrhosis, renal dysfunction, cardiac failure, and respiratory dysfunction |
Akagi, 2013 [41] (Review) | -T1–3 tumors -30–35 mm from AV -Independently to IAS invasion | -As for Schiessel et al. |
Saito, 2014 [64] | -T1–4 -≤5 cm from AV | -EAS/LAM infiltration -Fecal incontinence |
Shirouzu, 2017 [70] (Review) | -T1–3 -1–5 cm AV -Well-moderately diff. adenoca. | -T4 -Fixed tumors -EAS/LAM infiltration -Untreatable distant metastases -Poorly diff. adenoca. -Poor anal function -Severe preoperative pathologies (cardiac failure, liver cirrhosis, renal dysfunction, respiratory dysfunction) -Psychiatric disease |
Park, 2019 [56] | -Tumor’s response to nCRT on restaging MRI -Evaluation of ymrT stage and ymrCRM status | -Poor nCRT responders |
Piozzi, 2021 [57] | -≤4 cm from AV -After nCRT for cT3-T4 -(y)cT4 if curative resection is technically feasible at the pre-operative MRI -Conversion from an ultra-low AR in case of involvement/threatening of the distal gross margin in the resected specimen or in case of stapler failure for any reason | -EAS/LAM infiltration (at restaging MRI after nCRT) -Abundant mucinous component -Anal canal involvement below DL (requiring total ISR) -Fecal incontinence -Patient’s refusal |
First Author, Year | Country | n | Age | Sex, M | Distance-AV, cm | nCRT | Approach | ISR | Type (Par, Subt, Tot, ESR) | cT Stage | Stage 0/I/II/III/IV | DRM, cm | CRM, mm | R0 | FU, mo | LR Rate | DM | CT | OS-5 Years | DFS-5 Years | LRFS-5 Years |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kohler [43], 2000 | Germany | 31 | 60 | 55% | 1.3 ± 0.9 (DL) | 0% | O | T-P | 0/31/0/0 | T1–3 | 0/18/4/9/0 | 1.6 ± 0.8 | nr | 100% | 6.8 ± 3.7 (y) | 9.7% | 19.4% | 35% | 79% | nr | nr |
Vorobiev [58], 2004 | Russia | 27 | 55 (26–75) | 59% | 1.0 (0.5–1.5) (DL) | 7% | O | P | 0/0/27/0 | T2–3 | 0/8/18/1/0 | 1.9 (1.5–2.6) | 0.8 (0.6–1.5) | 100% | 38 (14–66) | 0 | 11.1% | 3.7% | 92.5% (3-y) | 88.9% (3-y) | 0% |
Schiessel [19], 2005 | Austria | 121 | 65.2 | 68% | 3 (1–5) (AM) | nr | O | T-P | nr | T1–3 | DK. A49, B33, C37 | nr | nr | nr | 94 (24–185) | 5.3% | nr | nr | nr | nr | nr |
Rullier [45], 2005 | France | 92 | 65 (25–86) | 62% | 3 (1.5–4.5) | 88% | O/L | T-P | nr | T1–4 | nr | 2 (0.5–3) | 5 (0–15) | 89% | 40 (63%) | 2% (63%) | 19% (63%) | nr | 81% | 70% | nr |
Hohenberger [46], 2006 | Germany | 65 | nr | nr | <2 (DL) | 54% | O | T-P | 60/0/0/0 | nr | nr | 1.5–2.0 | nr | nr | nr | 22.7% | nr | nr | 85.1% | nr | nr |
Chamlou [48], 2007 | France | 90 | 59 (27–82) | 65% | 3.5 (2.2–5.2) | 41% | O | T-P | 63/27/0/0 | T1–4 | 0/37/16/25/5 | 1.2 (0.5–3.5) | nr | 94.4% | 56.2 (13.3–168.4) | 8.8% | 8.8% | nr | 82% | 75% | nr |
Portier [49], 2007 | France | 173 | 64 ± 11 | 33% | 4.1 ± 1.4 | 53% | O | T-P | 173/0/0/0 | T1–4 | 0/74/46/53/0 | 2.6 ± 1.2 | nr | 96% | 66.8 ± 52.1 | 10.6% | nr | nr | 86.1% | 83.9% | nr |
Akasu [50], 2007 | Japan | 106 | 55 (26–75) | 78% | 3 (1–5) | 0% | O/L | T-P | 90/0/16/6 | T1–3 | 0/45/20/38/3 | 1.2 (0.3–4) | nr | 97% | 3.5 (0.9–11.7) (y) | 5.7% | 10% | 18% | 91% | 82% | 88% |
Krand [59], 2009 | Turkey | 47 | 57 (27–72) | 66% | 3.3 (1.5–5) | 100% | O | P | 47/0/0/0 | T2–3 | 0/nr/nr/25/0 | 1.2 ± 0.3 | 5 ± 2.3 | 98% | 67.5 (9–132) | 2.1% | 15.2% | 53.2% | 85% | 82% | nr |
Han [60], 2009 | China | 40 | 62 (34–73) | 60% | 1.5 (0.5–5.0) (DL) | 2.5% | O | P | 23/0/5/0 | T1–2 | 0/18/6/16/0 | 2.1 (2–5) | nr | 100% | 43 (12–94) | 5% | 2.5% | 7.5% | 97% | 86% | nr |
Weiser [61], 2009 | U.S.A. | 44 | 54 (28–78) | 57% | 5 (3–6) | 100% | O | P | nr | T1–3 | 11/16/12/5/0 | nr | nr | 92% | 47 (33–59) | 0% | 16% | nr | nr | 96% | 83% |
Kuo [62], 2011 | Taiwan | 26 | 51 (26–71) | 61% | 3.5 (2.5–5) | 88% | O | P | 26/0/0/0 | T1–3 | 0/14/2/9/0 | 1.4 (0.1–4.5) | 11 (1–31) | 87% | 55 (8–93) | 7.7% | 15% | nr | 83% | 76% | nr |
Gong [63], 2012 | China | 43 | 53 | 63% | <5 | 0% | O | P | nr | T1–2 | nr | nr | nr | 100% | 20 (12–42) | 0% | 0% | nr | nr | nr | nr |
Zhang [51], 2013 | China | 60 | 55 (30–77) | 65% | 4.2 (3–5) | 30% | O | T-P | 34/0/26/0 | T1–4 | 0/28/21/11/0 | 1.9 (1.0–3.2) | ≥1 mm | 100% | 49 (18–90) | 10% | 6.6% | nr | 90% | 83.3% | nr |
Tokoro [52], 2013 | Japan | 30 | 60 ± 10 | 40% | 0.9 ± 0.8 (DL) | 0% | O | T-P | 12/4/14/4 | Tis–T3 | 1/16/5/7/1 | 0.7 (0.3–2.2) | 3 (0.5–9) | 93% (CRM) | 56.2 (13.3–168.4) | 20% | 16% | nr | 76.5% | 68.4% | nr |
Akagi [53], 2013 | Japan | 124 | 65 (32–81) | 62% | 3 (1–4) | 0% | O | T-P | nr | T1–3 | 0/43/41/40/0 | nr | nr | 97.6% (CRM) | 85 (14–122) | 4.8% | 10.5% | 46.8% | 84.2–78.6% | 90.5–83.6% | 81.7% |
Saito [64], 2014 | Japan | 199 | 59 (27–80) | 72% | 3.8 | 25% | O | P | 64/80/55/41 | T1–4 | 9/69/46/75/0 | nr | 19.6% (≤1 mm) | 80.4% | 78 (12–164) | 13.6% | nr | 48% | 78.3% (7-y) | 66.7% (7-y) | 80.3% (7-y) |
Abdel-Gawad [65], 2014 | Egypt | 55 | nr | nr | 2.3 (0–5) | 45% | O/L | T-P | 35/0/20/20 | T1–3 | nr | nr | nr | 94.5% (CRM) | 1.5 (1–4.6) (y) | 5.4% | 12.7% | nr | 88.7% (3-y) | 82.6% (3-y) | 85.2% (3-y) |
Koyama [88], 2014 | Japan | 77 | 63 (24–86) | 73% | nr | 9% | nr | nr | nr | T1–4 | 0/20/25/32/0 | nr | nr | nr | 69 (56–87) | 7.8% | nr | nr | 76.4% | nr | 93.5% |
Mahalingam [54], 2017 | India | 33 | 50 (26–69) | 64% | 3 (1.5–5) | 91% | nr | T-P | nr | nr | nr | 2 (0.4–4) | nr | 100% | 48 (18–83) | 0% | 5% | nr | 95% (3-y) | nr | nr |
Klose [89], 2017 | Germany | 60 | 67 (41–86) | 72% | 3.4 (1–5) | 73% | nr | nr | nr | T1–4 | 0/36/12/9/3 | nr | nr | 95% | 58 (11–210) | nr | nr | 23% | 80% | 69% | nr |
Matsunaga [55], 2019 | Japan | 197 | 61 (33–80) | 70% | 4 (0.6–6.5) | 0% | nr | T-P | 88/62/47/0 | T1–3 | nr | nr | 0.3 (0.01–2) | 88% (CRM) | 68 (9–182) | nr | nr | nr | 88.3% | 76.9% | nr |
Molnar [90], 2019 | Romania | 37 | 66 ± 11 | 65% | 10–40 | nr | nr | nr | nr | nr | 0/7/13/16/1 | nr | nr | 87% (CRM) | 62 (55–80) | 5.4% | 5.4% | nr | 71% | nr | nr |
Park [56], 2019 | Korea | 147 | 61 ± 11 | 72% | 2.8 ± 1.0 | 100% | L/R | T-P | 31/95/21/0 | T2–4 | 33/36/42/36/0 | nr | nr | 95% | 34 (8–94) | 11.6% | 22.4% | nr | nr | 64.9% (3-y) | nr |
Kim [68], 2021 | Korea | 590 | 58 ± 11 | 59% | 3.3 ± 1.9 | 47% | R | TA | 155/93/42/70 | Tis–T3 | 41/103/59/77 | 1.5 ± 1.3 | 8 ± 6 | DRM ≤ 10 mm (45.4%), CRM ≤ 1 mm (7.8%) | 43 (21–59) | 2.4% (PS) | 15.1% (PS) | nr | 90.8% (PS) | 81.6% (PS) | nr |
Piozzi [57], 2021 | Korea | 161 | 59 (51–68) | 75% | 3 (2.5–3.5) | 71% | L/R | T-P | nr | T1-4 | 15/51/34/44/17 | 0.8 (0.5–1.5) | 0.3 (0.2–0.5) | 91.3% (CRM) | 55 (34.5–77.5) | 11.1% | 26.1% | 55.9% | 80% | 64% | 87% |
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Piozzi, G.N.; Baek, S.-J.; Kwak, J.-M.; Kim, J.; Kim, S.H. Anus-Preserving Surgery in Advanced Low-Lying Rectal Cancer: A Perspective on Oncological Safety of Intersphincteric Resection. Cancers 2021, 13, 4793. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13194793
Piozzi GN, Baek S-J, Kwak J-M, Kim J, Kim SH. Anus-Preserving Surgery in Advanced Low-Lying Rectal Cancer: A Perspective on Oncological Safety of Intersphincteric Resection. Cancers. 2021; 13(19):4793. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13194793
Chicago/Turabian StylePiozzi, Guglielmo Niccolò, Se-Jin Baek, Jung-Myun Kwak, Jin Kim, and Seon Hahn Kim. 2021. "Anus-Preserving Surgery in Advanced Low-Lying Rectal Cancer: A Perspective on Oncological Safety of Intersphincteric Resection" Cancers 13, no. 19: 4793. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13194793
APA StylePiozzi, G. N., Baek, S. -J., Kwak, J. -M., Kim, J., & Kim, S. H. (2021). Anus-Preserving Surgery in Advanced Low-Lying Rectal Cancer: A Perspective on Oncological Safety of Intersphincteric Resection. Cancers, 13(19), 4793. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13194793