Buhre L M, Mensink H J, Aalders J G, Mehta D M, Verschueren R C
Department of Surgery, Groningen University Hospital, The Netherlands.
Eur J Surg Oncol. 1991 Feb;17(1):65-70.
The authors report their experience with 20 female patients with advanced rectal cancer in whom rectal excision was combined with concomitant excision of the uterus and/or posterior vaginal wall. Six patients presented with a malignant fistula between the rectum and the genital tract; 10 had pre-operative radiotherapy, with a total dose of 50 Gy in seven patients and 30 Gy in three. The resection was judged as radical in 18 patients; the specimen was staged as a Dukes' B in eight and a Dukes' C in 10 cases. Three patients died within the follow-up period, due to intercurrent disease, without evidence of recurrence. Seven patients have been followed without evidence of disease for an average of 91 months (range 39-143 months). One patient is alive 5 years after surgery with a pelvic recurrence. Seven patients succumbed to distant metastases alone (n = 4) or to a combination of haematogenous metastases and pelvic recurrence (n = 3). The authors make a plea for local radicality in advanced rectal cancer in female patients, to preserve quality of life in most patients and a cure in some.