Article

Extrarectal Colonic Carcinoma Analysis of 138 Cases With Long-term Follow-up

Authors: SAMUEL SALIBA MD, WLADIMIR ROSALES MD, ALBERTO ESCALLON JR. MD, JOAQUIN S. ALDRETE MD

Abstract

ABSTRACTTo identify factors that determine long-term survival after resection of extrarectal colonic cancer, we analyzed 138 such patients operated upon in a five-year period. Because rectal tumors have lower survival rates, they were excluded hoping to enhance the prognostic accuracy of the study. The sigmoid colon was the most common location of the tumor (59%) followed by the ascending (19%), the transverse (15%), and the descending colon (9%). In 95 patients (69%), operation was curative. In 12 patients (9%), a resection even with palliative aims could not be done; The five-year survival rates were 87% for 23 patients with Dukes A and B lesions, 62% for 32 patients with Dukes B2 lesions, 36% for 42 patients with Dukes C1 lesions, and 0% for 34 patients with Dukes C2 or higher. The overall five-year survival rate was 42%. These results emphasize the prognostic reliability-of pathologic staging methods and bring into focus the importance of enhancing efforts for detecting extrarectal colonic cancers at early stages of development when curative resection offers maximal chances for cure.

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