Background: Laparoscopic total mesorectal excision for low rectal cancer is not considered a gold standard treatment due to the high conversion rate and the long operation time.
Methods: A retrospective review examined a surgical series of 174 laparoscopic low rectal resections involving total mesorectal excision (1995-2006), with particular reference to technical points as well as surgical and oncologic outcomes. Miles operations and partial mesorectal excisions were excluded.
Results: The cancer affected the low rectum in 110 cases and the medium rectum in 64 cases. A total of 68 patients were subjected to neoadjuvant radiochemotherapy. The anastomosis was mechanical for 83.3% of the cases and intersphinteric through the perineum for 16.6% of the cases. Protective ileostomy was performed in 112 cases. The conversion rate was 4.6%. The mesorectum remained intact in 91.6% of the cases and was partially interrupted in 15 of the cases. In no case was it totally discontinued. The postoperative morbidity rate was 16.7%, and the mortality rate was 0.57%. The incidence of anastomotic fistulas was 14.4%. The percentage was higher for males (18.6 vs 8.3%) and correlated with the low distance of the tumor from the anal verge (18.2 vs 7.8%) and the absence of a protection ileostomy (20.9 vs 10.7%). After an average follow-up period of 48.6 months (range, 24-149 months), six patients (3.44%) experienced a pelvic recurrence. The 5-year overall survival rate was 75.4%, and the disease-free survival rate was 61.9%.
Conclusion: Laparoscopic total mesorectal excision for low rectal cancer is safe and effective, allowing surgical and oncologic outcomes similar to those reported for open surgery.