Traditional teaching and current widespread practice suggest that any
rectal cancer within reach of any examining finger be treated by
abdominoperineal resection (removal of the entire rectum with
establishment of a permanent colostomy/bag).
When surgery is performed according to the
standard or conventional method the pelvis is dissected bluntly, without
regard for planes of anatomy. The result is not only inadequate cancer
resection (removal), but the avulsion of and destruction of the nerves
which control both sexual and urinary functions which pass immediately
around the rectum.
The sum total of this experience is that
the patient can expect a poor cancer operation, a permanent colostomy,
impotence, and urinary disturbances, in addition to a local recurrence
rate of 30-50% largely due to the inadequate removal of all cancer. The
implications of this recurrence are poor survival (fatality in nearly
100% of cases), pain and suffering due to the recurrent cancer invading
nerves in the pelvis, multiple hospitalizations, and major societal
costs related to lost time from work, disability, medical care and
death. Additionally, the high incidence of local failure has prompted
the widespread use of radiation and chemotherapy after standard surgery.
Both treatments are costly and carry their own rates of complications
and consequences (e.g. poor rectal functions).
Over the decade, major progress on all of
these fronts has been achieved by a few surgeons(colorectal surgeons)
who have been dedicated to the treatment of rectal cancer in major
centers around the world, most notably in the UK, the US and Japan and
more recently in the Netherlands, Norway and Sweden.
In India there are very few dedicated
colorectal units and surgeons doing optimal surgeries. Operation for
rectal cancer requires an operation on the principle of using sharp
dissection (as opposed to blunt) along definable planes of anatomy,
resecting the entire cancer including the rectum and surrounding fat
where the lymph nodes are located. (TME-Total Mesorectal Excision)
Surgeons practising TME have consistently
reported survival rates of 75% (compared with 45%), pelvic recurrence of
5-8% (compared to traditional 30%) and the ability to enhance sphincter
preservation. In recent years, attention to the anatomy of the pelvic
autonomic nerves has lead to the overall preservation of sexual and
urinary function in 85% or more of men and women who were sexually
active prior to surgery (the average age of patients with rectal cancer
is 62+).
Most of the rectal cancers these days can
be treated without creating a permanent colostomy The use of a permanent
colostomy has been limited to those patients who have a rectal cancer in
the lowest reaches of the rectum, where no opportunity exists to save
the anal and low rectal sphincters. This new technique known as Total
Mesorectal Excision (TME) is being practiced in the colorectal surgery
unit (blue surgery unit) at Christian Medical College and
Hospital.
Dr.
Rajeev Kapoor has had ample experience in this field while he was
working in the colorectal surgery unit of Flinder Medical centre,
Adelaide, Australia. During his stay of two years Dr. Kapoor worked
extensively in the management of bowel and rectal cancer.