This study determined whether the long-term outcome of patients with obstructing colorectal cancer could be related to conventional pathological prognostic variables or to other clinical, operative or histological features. Ninety-eight patients with bowel obstruction who had undergone potentially curative surgery and survived the postoperative period were studied. Features related to poor long-term outcome after a median follow-up of 5 years included bowel perforation at initial operation (P = 0.007), advanced tumour stage (P < 0.001), poor tumour differentiation (P = 0.02), mucin production by tumour (P = 0.004) and the presence of vascular (P = 0.08) and neural (P = 0.004) invasion. Outcome was not significantly related to the seniority of the operating surgeon (P = 0.52), even when this was adjusted for potentially confounding variables (adjusted hazard rate ratio for trainee surgeons 1.4 (95 per cent confidence interval 0.9-2.4), P = 0.16). Conventional prognostic features may help to identify the majority of patients with obstructed colorectal cancer at high risk of tumour recurrence and death.
CITATION STYLE
Mulcahy, H. E., Skelly, M. M., Husain, A., & O’Donoghue, D. P. (1996). Long-term outcome following curative surgery for malignant large bowel obstruction. British Journal of Surgery, 83(1), 46–50. https://doi.org/10.1002/bjs.1800830114
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