COLORECTAL CANCER: ITS CLINICAL PICTURE AND SURVIVAL

1996 
Retrospectively collected information on 77 patients who had undergone resection for colorectal cancer at Belen Hospital, Trujillo, Peru, from 1966 to 1993, was analyzed to establish their clinical features and the importance of both clinical and pathological factors affecting outcome. Common presenting features in right colon cancer were abdominal pain, pallor, and palpable mass; in left colon cancer were symptoms of obstruction, and in rectal carcinoma predominated bleeding. The diagnostic accuracy of barium enema (n = 25) and proctosigmoidoscopy (n = 18) was 72 and 100% respectively. In 54.5% (n = 42) curative resection and in 45.5% (n = 35) palliative resection was performed The surgical procedures performed were right hemicolectomy (n = 29), transverse colectomy (n = 6), left hemicolectomy (n = 11), sigmoid resection (n = 14), low anterior resection (n = 5), and abdominoperineal resection of the rectum (n = 12). The total perioperative mortality rate was 18%. The 5 year survival rate in this series was 28% (53% for curative resection and 0% for palliative resection). An univariate analysis of survival time using long-rank test revealed that presence of bowel obstruction or perforation, macroscopic appearance, tumor size, depth of invasion, lymph node status, number of lymph node metastasis, distant metastasis, and clinical stage had and individual prognostic significance. Age, sex, length of disease, serum hemoglobin level, blood transfusions, location of tumor, histologic type, and tumor grade did not affect the prognosis. Improvement in the survival probably depends on development of better adjuvant therapy in association with surgery.
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