Introduction: Rectal cancer is a prevalent disease that requires multidisciplinary management. Results of treatment of patients suffering from this malignancy in Latin America have been scarcely reported before.
Methods: A retrospective, multicenter study was conducted to report preoperative and operative characteristics of patients intervened for rectal cancer in centers from Latin America during 2015-2022, and the short-term results of treatment were analyzed. The study was open to any center receiving rectal cancer patients, irrespective of volume. The main study outcome was 30-day postoperative complications including any deviation from the normal postoperative course (Clavien Dindo I to V).
Results: A total of 2044 patients from 49 centers in 12 Latin American countries were included, with a mean age of 63 years. Twenty-five percent of patients were operated in low-volume centers. Twenty-nine percent of patients had a tumor located in the low rectum, and only 53% of patients had preoperative MRI for local staging. A total of 1052 patients (52%) received neoadjuvant therapy before surgery. Eighty-six percent of patients were operated by a specialized colorectal surgeon, and 31% of patients were intervened using a conventional approach. A total of 29.9% of patients presented a postoperative complication. The anastomotic leak rate was 8.9%. Fifty-eight percent of pathology reports had less than 12 lymph nodes harvested, and 22.9% of reports did not include mesorectal quality. In the multivariate analysis, neoadjuvant therapy (OR: 1.44, p-value: 0.023), urgent procedures (OR: 3.73, p-value: 0.049), intraoperative complications (OR: 2.21, p-value: 0.046), advanced tumors (OR: 1.39, p-value: 0.036), and prolonged surgery (OR: 1.74, p-value: 0.004) were found to be independently related to suffering postoperative complications.
Conclusions: This study includes information about the approach and results of rectal cancer management in Latin America at a large scale. In the future, this information can be used as a bridge to identify areas of improvement among rectal cancer patients' treatment in the region.
Keywords: Cancer; Latin America; Multidisciplinary; Neoadjuvant; Rectal.
© 2024. The Author(s).