Abdominal gunshot wounds need immediate surgical treatment. Concerning stab wounds, obligatory as well as selective surgical methods are both acceptable. Because of valid diagnostic options, thoracic stab wounds allow several ways of treatment.
Intraoperative radiotherapy (IORT) is a new concept in the treatment of recurrent and primary advanced colorectal tumors. Between October 1994 and December 1997 27 patients (primary tumor: 8, first recurrent tumor: 12, second recurrent tumor: 7) received IORT (32 applications). Chemotherapy and percutaneous radiotherapy had already been given to all patients with advanced and recurrent colorectal tumors. The intraoperative irradiation was performed through HDR iridium afterloading. A flexible flab--individually adapted to the "tumor bed"--was used as applicator. The contact dose ranged from 10 to 15 Gy. The mean operation time (rectum resection: 5, rectum amputation: 14, debulking: 8) increased by 30 min on average. Eight patients had postoperative complications: perianal wound infections (3), sacrovesical fistulas (3), leakage of anastomosis (1) and neural ureter dysfunction (1). To date--on average 17.1 months (range: 3-33) after operation--13 patients are free of tumor recurrence or show stable disease. Ten patients--all of them had macroscopic residual tumor--have local tumor progression combined with good quality of life. Only 4 patients died (acute kidney failure, stroke, marasmus, systemic progression). The afterloading flab technique represents a technically simple, minimally harmful procedure in the therapy of colorectal tumor. Even when IORT with electrons is not feasible or the patients have already been irradiated, a higher radiation dose is possible. Given the demonstrated rate of local tumor recurrence, the afterloading flab technique seems to be a valuable treatment alternative to extended, high-risk resections. Long-term follow-ups will be necessary.
Estimates of the colon cancer burden associated with hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC) vary from less than 1 % to more than 5 %. Amsterdam criteria fulfilled within a kindred (classic Amsterdam and Amsterdam II criteria) are widely used to identify patients prone to HNPCC. The present study was initiated to assess the frequency of the Amsterdam criteria within a regional German cohort of 207 patients with a history of colorectal cancer (CRC). Data on individual and family cancer histories were available in 154 patients (73 women, 81 men; mean age at diagnosis 62.4 +/- 13.3 years). A total of 843 first degree relatives have been identified within the kindreds of whom 121 had verified cancers. In 28 of 154 families (18 %), at least one first degree relative of the index patient had CRC. With respect to a typical family history, five kindreds (3.2 %) were likely to suffer from HNPCC on a clinical basis (4 kindreds met the classic Amsterdam criteria and one kindred the Amsterdam II criteria). Testing for microsatellite instability could additionally be performed in 4 of 5 patients who met the Amsterdam criteria and revealed DNA instability in 3 cases. Moreover, a missense mutation of MSH2 (Gly965Asp) was detected in one patient with microsatellite instability. Based on the classic Amsterdam and Amsterdam II criteria approximately 3 % of a regional German cohort of patients with CRC are likely to suffer from HNPCC. However, the final diagnosis of HNPCC can only be established by detection of pathogenic germline mutations within the DNA mismatch repair genes.
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