A 58-year-old man with chronic renal disease underwent ileo-cecal resection with lymph node dissection for cancer of the ascending colon at his previous physician. The pathological diagnosis was pT3N0M0, pStage Ⅱa. One year and 7 months after surgery, he was diagnosed with local and lymph node recurrence and referred to our department. Contrast- enhanced CT revealed that an irregular nodal shadow 25 mm in size adjacent to the superior mesenteric artery and the transvers part of duodenum, which was suspicious for lymph node recurrence. We regarded this patient as marginally resectable and neoadjuvant treatment was considered, but because the patient was on dialysis, we decided to operate without pre-operative treatment. Surgical findings showed invasion of a recurrent lymph node into a primary branch of the superior mesenteric artery and vein. We temporarily blocked these vessels and cut off these vessels after checking that blood flow in the intestine was maintained by intravenous injection of ICG. The lymph node was also invading the uncinate process of the pancreas and the transvers part of duodenum, we performed partial resection of those organs. Pathology revealed no tumor exposure on the dissected surface and R0 resection was achieved. The patient received 5 courses of postoperative folinate/ uracil/tegafur therapy and is alive 1 year postoperatively without recurrence.