Rectal Cancer

Folder Rectal Cancer

Documents

video Watch and Wait for Rectal Cancer: Strategies for and outcomes of salvage surgery

By In Rectal Cancer

Symposium - Andrew Renehan (UK) at ESCP Nice 2018

video Anastomotic Leakage: Improvements in low anastomotic techniques

By In Rectal Cancer

ESCP/EAES Symposium - Francesco Bianco (Italy) at ESCP Nice 2018

video Anastomotic Leakage: Can we avoid an ileostomy?

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ESCP/EAES Symposium - Sebastiano Biondo (Spain) at ESCP Nice 2018

video Anastomotic Leakage: Early salvage of anastomotic failure

By In Rectal Cancer

ESCP/EAES Symposium - Pieter Tanis (The Netherlands) at ESCP Nice 2018

video Local excision in downstaged T2T3 low rectal cancer: 5-year results of the GRECCAR 2 trial

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The Six Best Free Papers - Eric Rullier (France) at ESCP Nice 2018

video Early closure of a temporary ileostomy after rectal resection for cancer (EASY trial): functional outcome

By In Rectal Cancer

The Six Best Free Papers - Jennifer Park (Sweden) at ESCP Nice 2018

video Consolidation mFOLFOX6 chemotherapy after chemoradiotherapy improves survival in patients with locally advanced rectal cancer

By In Rectal Cancer

ASCRS Visiting Fellow Free Paper - Michael Marco (USA) at ESCP Nice 2018

video TREC: Transanal endoscopic microsurgery and radiotherapy for early rectal cancer

By In Rectal Cancer

International Trials Results Forum - Simon Bach (UK) with Expert commentary by Quentin Denost (France) at ESCP Nice 2018

video Patient and healthcare professional perception of colostomy-related problems and their impact on quality of life following rectal cancer surgery

By In Rectal Cancer

Young ESCP Members Best Three Papers - Hossam Elfeki (Egypt) at ESCP Nice 2018

video Management of rectal polyps and T1 rectal cancers

By In Rectal Cancer

Core Subject Update - Roel Hompes (The Netherlands) at ESCP Nice 2018

video Laparoscopic ovarian transposition before radio-chemotherapy in a young patient with rectal cancer

By In Rectal Cancer

Surgical Video Session - Jose Maria Enriquez-Navascues (Spain) at ESCP Nice 2018

video Tips, tricks and error traps: recurrent rectal cancer and pelvic exenteration

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Symposium - Michael Solomon (Australia) at ESCP Nice 2018

video Tips, tricks and error traps: primary rectal cancer

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Symposium - Bill Heald (UK) at ESCP Nice 2018

video The NORWAIT Trial

By In Rectal Cancer

New Trials Forum - Hartwig Kroner (Norway) at ESCP Nice 2018

video Core Subject Update: MRI in rectal cancer treatment

By In Rectal Cancer

Educational session - Geerard Beets (The Netherlands) at ESCP Berlin 2017

video GRECCAR6

By In Rectal Cancer

International Trials Results Forum - Jérémie Lefevre (France) with expert commentary by Pieter Tanis (The Netherlands) at ESCP Berlin 2017

video Step-by-step procedures of taTME according to pelvic surgical anatomies for low rectal cancer

By In Rectal Cancer

Surgical Video Session - Masaaki Ito (Japan) at ESCP Berlin 2017

video Extended gracilis myocutaneous flap: a different option for perineal and vaginal reconstruction after posterior pelvic exenteration for rectal cancer

By In Rectal Cancer

Surgical Video Session - Luis Sanchez-Guillen (Spain) at ESCP Berlin 2017

video Guidelines synthesis: guidelines for rectal cancer follow-up

By In Rectal Cancer

ESCP Guidelines Update - Søren Laurberg (Denmark) at ESCP Berlin 2017

video Trainee Video Session: Inter-sphincteric abdomino perineal excision

By In Rectal Cancer

Educational session - Brendan Moran (UK) at ESCP Berlin 2017

video Laparoscopic surgery for locally recurrent rectal cancer

By In Rectal Cancer

JSCP Visiting Fellow Free Paper - Mamoru Uemura at ESCP Berlin 2017

video The rectal cancer female sexuality score: development and validation of a scoring system for female sexual function after rectal cancer surgery

By In Rectal Cancer

One of the Six Best Free Papers - Anne Thyø (Denmark) at ESCP Berlin 2017

video LARS - from bedside to bench and back

By In Rectal Cancer

Keynote Lecture - Søren Laurberg (Denmark) at ESCP Berlin 2017

video What to do with a T2 Rectal Cancer? Introduction

By In Rectal Cancer

Symposium - Simon Bach (UK) at ESCP Berlin 2017

video What to do with a T2 Rectal Cancer? Surgery alone - still the standard?

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Symposium - Ivan Dimitrijević (Serbia) at ESCP Berlin 2017

video What to do with a T2 Rectal Cancer? CRT followed by local excision?

By In Rectal Cancer

Symposium - Julio Garcia Aguilar (USA) at ESCP Berlin 2017

video What to do with a T2 Rectal Cancer? CRT - wait and watch?

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Symposium - Geerard Beets (Netherlands) at ESCP Berlin 2017

video What to do with a T2 Rectal Cancer? Panel debate

By In Rectal Cancer

Symposium chaired by Simon Bach (UK) and Eric Rullier (France)

video Total InterSphincteric Resection followed by Transanal TME

By In Rectal Cancer

As part of taTME month, Quentin Denost, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Bordeaux, explores using the procedure following total ISR in female.

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document Rectal Cancer (Chapter 26, European Manual of Medicine: Coloproctology Second Edition) Popular

By In Rectal Cancer

Rectal cancer should be managed by a multidisciplinary team (MDT) that includes input from gastroenterology, radiology, pathology, radiation oncology, and oncology in addition to colorectal surgery. The workup of suspected rectal cancer includes digital rectal examination, rectoscopy (proctoscopy), and biopsy. Staging of the tumor requires thoracic/abdominal computed tomography, pelvic magnetic resonance imaging, and complete colonoscopy to assess local tumor growth, systemic spread, and synchronous colonic lesions. The findings should be discussed during an MDT conference to determine the optimal sequence of treatment and the timing and extent of surgical resection. Radiotherapy, which is best delivered preoperatively, reduces the risk of local recurrence and may enhance survival in high-risk patients. Concomitant chemotherapy is used to increase the effect of radiotherapy (chemosensitizing radiation). Complete resection of the rectum en bloc with the surrounding mesorectal envelope enclosing draining lymphatic tissue, called total mesorectal excision, is the gold standard to decrease the risk of local recurrence and avoid injury to adjacent pelvic structures. Rectal cancers in the middle and upper third of the rectum can be treated with sphincter-saving anterior resection and colorectal anastomosis. Cancer in the lower third of the rectum may be amenable to low anterior resection with coloanal anastomosis or require abdominoperineal excision. Tumors involving the pelvic floor or external anal sphincter are treated with extralevator abdominoperineal excision and permanent colostomy. Preoperative chemoradiotherapy may result in complete clinical and radiological response. Such patients may enter a watch-and-wait program of intensive surveillance to detect tumor regrowth. Review of the surgical specimen pathology during a postoperative MDT meeting is important to ensure treatment quality and to determine the potential need for adjuvant chemotherapy. Follow-up after treatment, to detect metachronous colorectal cancer, local recurrence, or systemic disease, should continue for 5 years. Surgery and radiotherapy have adverse effects on function of the bowel, urinary bladder, sexual organs, and gonads, which warrant attention both at the onset of treatment and during follow-up.

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