The efficiency of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and that of transrectal ultrasound (TRUS) were compared in preoperative staging of 15 patients with rectal cancer and in postoperative follow-up of 12 patients. Thirteen of the 15 patients evaluated for preoperative staging were operated on. Preoperative staging and pathologic finding were identical in 11 patients (84.6 percent) examined by TRUS and in 10 patients (76.9 percent) examined by MRI. Recurrent cancer was detected in 3 of 12 patients in the follow-up group. MRI was able to diagnose correctly 10 of 12 patients (83.2 percent), one patient was misdiagnosed, and in one patient the MRI could not distinguish between fibrous tissue and recurrent cancer. TRUS diagnosed correctly only 5 of 12 patients (41.6 percent). One was falsely diagnosed, and, in 6 patients (50 percent), this examination could not differentiate between fibrous tissue and recurrent tumor. According to our results, both MRI and TRUS have a place in the preoperative staging of patients with rectal cancer. The main differences between the two methods were in the differential diagnoses of fibrous tissue and recurrent cancer. MRI being more specific in detection of recurrence.
A comparative study of preoperative evaluation of rectal cancer is presented. Sixty-eight patients with rectal cancer were examined digitally and by computerized tomography and transrectal ultrasound. Preoperative staging was compared with pathologic findings at surgery. Digital examination and transrectal ultrasound were accurate in 82.8 and 76.2 percent, respectively and were superior to CT, which was accurate in 65.5 percent of cases for assessment of rectal wall invasion. All three modes play a role in preoperative assessment, but digital examination and rectal ultrasound appear to be more effective.
Fifty-five patients underwent curative stapled low anterior resection for rectal adenocarcinomas located 5 to 15 cm from the anal verge. Two patients (3.7 percent) died postoperatively. The mean follow-up for the remaining 53 patients was 40 months. Local recurrence was diagnosed in 17 patients (32 percent), in most (88 percent) within the first two years after surgery. Most local recurrences appeared in patients classified as Dukes' C1 and C2 but, surprisingly, no significant difference was found between rectal tumors of high and low location as regards recurrence. The high rate of recurrence in this series may be attributable to the large number of patients with advanced tumors, and poorly differentiated carcinoma, or both.
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