Surgical results in 657 patients with colorectal cancer |
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Authors: | Dr. Matti J. Turunen M.D. Pekka Peltokallio M.D. |
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Affiliation: | 1. Second Department of Surgery, Helsinki University Central Hospital, Haartmaninkatu 4, 00290, Helsinki 29, Finland
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Abstract: | Six hundred fifty-seven patients with colorectal cancer who were operated upon at the Second Department of Surgery, Helsinki University Central Hospital during the period 1966 to 1975 had a 40.5 per cent crude five-year survival rate and 54.2 per cent relative (corrected) rate. The survival rates of patients with Dukes' A lesions were 80.7 per cent, Dukes' B, 61.6 per cent, Dukes' C, 40.4 per cent, and Dukes' D, 2.7 per cent. One hundred two patients (15.5 per cent) underwent emergency operations; 91 were occlusive cancers, eight were perforations and three were cancer bleedings. The operative mortality for the whole series was 6.5 per cent (4.7 per cent in elective and 16.7 per cent in emergency operations). A definite improvement of the five-year survival rates could be seen in both the colonic and rectal cancer series. This was due to earlier detection of the disease, reflecting a decreasing number of palliative operations. Patients at high risk for colorectal cancer (inflammatory bowel disease, inherited intestinal polyposis, cancer family syndrome, multiple colorectal cancers, and neoplastic polyps) might benefit from more effective cancer surveillance and prophylactic surgery to find and treat cancers in earlier stages, to prevent recurrences, and to facilitate follow-up. The controversial findings on postoperative adjuvant therapy presented in this study indicate the need for further controlled studies to define the patients who really benefit from it. |
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