Sphincter-saving treatment in epidermoid anal cancer: cooperative analysis of 142 patients in five German university surgical centers
- PMID: 11151431
- DOI: 10.1007/s003840000246
Sphincter-saving treatment in epidermoid anal cancer: cooperative analysis of 142 patients in five German university surgical centers
Abstract
Five southern German university centers cooperated in comparing the effect of surgical vs. nonsurgical therapy strategies on survival and sphincter preservation in the treatment of anal cancer. A standardized questionnaire was used to evaluate retrospectively (mean follow-up 30 months) treatment strategy and outcome (survival, colostomy rate, colostomy-free survival) in patients treated between 1987 and 1996. Of the 142 patients 65% had squamous cell, 20% basaloid, 6% adeno-, and 1% undifferentiated carcinoma (8% histology not recorded); 9% were classified in UICC stage I, 37% in stage II, 25% in stage III, and 4% in stage IV (25% not recorded). Primary treatment consisted of local excision (10%), excision plus radio- and/or chemotherapy (17%), radiotherapy (20%), radiochemotherapy (28%), or colostomy with or without resection, radiotherapy, and chemotherapy (23%). We observed no difference between these treatment groups in overall (P = 0.43) or colostomy-free survival (P = 0.14, log-rank). Primary colostomy was prevented in 77% of cases and decreased over the years. Mean overall survival (in months) was 42 in stage I, 38 in stage II, and 25 in stage III (P = 0.0013); mean colostomy-free survival was 36 in stage I, 26 in stage II, and 16 in stage III (P = 0.0021, log-rank). Outcome was not significantly related to therapeutic strategy (surgery or radio-chemotherapy. Primary surgical and nonsurgical strategies in treating anal cancer thus produced similar results, although radiochemotherapy is usually recommended for sphincter-endangering anal cancer. Challenges to be met in the future include the prevention of metastasis and long-term preservation of anal sphincter function.
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