Rectal Cancer

Folder Rectal Cancer

Documents

video Renal function remains significantly deranged 3 months after anterior resection when a defunctioning loop ileostomy is used rather than a loop colostomy

By In Rectal Cancer

Free paper - Nick Battersby at ESCP Belgrade 2013

video Regression of extramural venous invasion after neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy improves disease-free survival in rectal cancer

By In Rectal Cancer

Free paper - Manish Chand at ESCP Belgrade 2013

video Redefining boundaries with the PelvEx and REACCT global collaboratives

By In Rectal Cancer

Keynote Lecture - Des Winter at ESCP Vienna 2019

pdf Recurrence and survival in patients with ut2un0 rectal cancer treated with neoadjuvant chemoradiation and local excision: results of the ACOSOG Z6041 trial

By In Rectal Cancer

One of the Six Best Papers - Jorge Marcet (USA) at Tripartite Colorectal Meeting 2014

video Recurrence and survival in patients with UT2UN0 rectal cancer (RC) treated with neoadjuvant chemoradiation (CRT) and local excision (LE): results of the ACOSOG Z6041 trial

By In Rectal Cancer

ASCRS Visiting Fellow free paper - Julio Garcia Aguilar at ESCP Barcelona 2014

video Rectal outcomes after a liver-first management of patients with stage IV rectal cancer

By In Rectal Cancer

Oral Poster (Neoplasia) - Frederic Ris at ESCP Barcelona 2014

video Rectal cancer: Upper third rectal cancer: TME or PME?

By In Rectal Cancer

Symposium - Zoran Krivokapic at ESCP Vienna 2012

video Rectal cancer tumour height and pre-operative radiotherapy impair quality of life due to bowel dysfunction: a stratification tool to inform decision-making

By In Rectal Cancer

Oral Poster (Neoplasia) - Nick Battersby at ESCP Barcelona 2014

video Rectal cancer surgery without bowel preparation: the French GRECCAR III multicentre single-blinded randomized trial

By In Rectal Cancer

One of the Six Best Papers - Frederic Bretagnol at ESCP Sorrento 2010

video Rectal cancer surgery in 2023: TME or PME: rationale and risks of both techniques for rectal cancer

By In Rectal Cancer

Roel Hompes (The Netherlands) at ESCP Vilnius 2023

video Rectal cancer surgery in 2023: Organ preservation for rectal cancer

By In Rectal Cancer

Nuno Figueiredo (Portugal) at ESCP Vilnius 2023

video Rectal Cancer Surgery in 2023: Lateral lymph node dissection, yes (Japan)

By In Rectal Cancer

Yusuke Kinugasa (Japan) at ESCP Vilnius 2023

video Rectal Cancer Surgery in 2023: Lateral lymph node dissection, no (Europe)

By In Rectal Cancer

Antonino Spinelli (Italy) at ESCP Vilnius 2023

video Rectal cancer surgery in 2023: Dissection of the low rectum: Transanal

By In Rectal Cancer

Sharaf Perdawood (Denmark) at ESCP Vilnius 2023

video Rectal cancer surgery in 2023: Dissection of the low rectum: robotic

By In Rectal Cancer

Jim Khan (United Kingdom) at ESCP Vilnius 2023

video Rectal cancer surgery in 2023: Dissection of the low rectum: Open

By In Rectal Cancer

Felix Aigner (Germany) at ESCP Vilnius 2023

video Rectal cancer surgery in 2023: Dissection of the low rectum: Laparoscopic

By In Rectal Cancer

Joep Knol (Belgium) at ESCP Vilnius 2023

video Rectal Cancer Surgery in 2023: Beyond TME resection

By In Rectal Cancer

Quentin Denost (France) at ESCP Vilnius 2023

video Rectal cancer surgery after high dose radiotherapy for prostate cancer: is sphincter preservation relevant?

By In Rectal Cancer

Free paper - Etienne Buscail at ESCP Belgrade 2013

video Rectal Cancer - where are we in 2022? Robotics - an update

By In Rectal Cancer

Scientific session - Jim Khan (UK) at ESCP Dublin 2022

video Rectal Cancer - where are we in 2022? Inter-sphincteric resection for low rectal cancer

By In Rectal Cancer

Scientific session - Seon Hahn Kim (South Korea) at ESCP Dublin 2022

video Rectal Cancer - where are we in 2022? Early rectal cancer - when is local resection a good option?

By In Rectal Cancer

Scientific session - Konstantinos Stamou (Greece) at ESCP Dublin 2022

video Rectal Cancer - where are we in 2022? Current status of TME - which approach for which tumours?

By In Rectal Cancer

Scientific session - Brendan Moran (UK) at ESCP Dublin 2022

video Rectal cancer - is it time to do less?

By In Rectal Cancer

Keynote Lecture - Eric Rullier at ESCP Barcelona 2014

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.

video Re-Evolutions in rectal cancer surgery

By In Rectal Cancer

ESCP/EAES joint symposium - Fred Ris (Swtizerland) at ESCP Vilnius 2023

video Randomised controlled trial of high ligation or low ligation in anterior resection of rectal cancer

By In Rectal Cancer

Japanese Visiting Fellow - Kenji Matsuda at ESCP Dublin 2015

video Quality of life of rectal cancer survivors is severely affected by bowel dysfunction - results from an international multicenter study

By In Rectal Cancer

Oral poster - Therese Juul at ESCP Belgrade 2013

video Procalcitonin and C-reactive protein as early predictors of anastomotic leakage after low anterior resection

By In Rectal Cancer

Free Paper (Neoplasia) - Evgeni Rybakov at ESCP Dublin 2015

ESCP Affiliates