Purpose: This prospective, nonrandomized study evaluates, with a seven-year median follow-up, the morbidity and the functional and oncologic results of conservative surgery after high-dose radiation for cancer of the lower third of the rectum of patients who would otherwise have undergone abdominoperineal resection.
Methods: Between June 1990 and June 1996, 43 patients with distal rectal adenocarcinoma were treated by preoperative radiotherapy (40 + 20 Gy delivered with three fields) and curative surgery. The mean distance from the anal verge was 50 (range, 25-60) mm, and none of the tumors was fixed (15 percent T2N0, 53 percent T3N0, 32 percent T3N1).
Results: Postoperative mortality (2 percent) and morbidity (35 percent) were not increased by high-dose preoperative radiation. Conservative surgery was done in 30 patients (70 percent: 26 coloanal anastomoses and 4 low stapled anastomoses). After conservative surgery, long-term functional results showed 30 percent complete continence and 20 percent serious incontinence. Four patients had local recurrence as first development (13 percent). The seven-year overall survival rate was 53 percent, 62 percent after conservative surgery and 31 percent after abdominoperineal resection. The univariate analysis underscores the tumor response impact on long-term survival (pT<3 = 81 percent; pT3 = 35 percent; P = 0.0008).
Conclusions: These long-term results confirm the feasibility of conservative surgery for low rectal carcinoma after high-dose radiation. A prospective multicentric trial began in France in June 1996 to evaluate the reproducibility of these results.