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World J Gastroenterol. Apr 7, 2011; 17(13): 1674-1684
Published online Apr 7, 2011. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v17.i13.1674
Patterns of local recurrence in rectal cancer after a multidisciplinary approach
Jose M Enríquez-Navascués, Nerea Borda, Aintzane Lizerazu, Carlos Placer, Jose L Elosegui, Juan P Ciria, Adelaida Lacasta, Luis Bujanda
Jose M Enríquez-Navascués, Nerea Borda, Aintzane Lizerazu, Carlos Placer, Jose L Elosegui, Juan P Ciria, Adelaida Lacasta, Luis Bujanda, Colorectal Cancer Multidisciplinary Unit, Donostia Hospital, University of the Basque Country, Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Enfermedades Hepáticas y Digestivas, 20010 San Sebastian, Spain
Author contributions: Enríquez-Navascués JM, Bujanda L and Placer C designed the content of the paper; Borda N, Lizerazu A and Elosegui JL performed the summaries of the reviewed articles; Lacasta A and Ciria JP analyzed the data; Enríquez-Navascués JM wrote the paper.
Supported by CIBERehd, funded by the Carlos III Health Institute
Correspondence to: Luis Bujanda, Colorectal Cancer Multidisciplinary Unit, Donostia Hospital, University of the Basque Country, Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Enfermedades Hepáticas y Digestivas, Avda Sancho El Sabio, 17-2ºDcha, 20010 San Sebastian, Spain. luis.bujanda@osakidetza.net
Telephone: +34-943007173 Fax: +34-943007065
Received: October 12, 2010
Revised: November 12, 2010
Accepted: November 19, 2010
Published online: April 7, 2011
Abstract

Improvements in surgery and the application of combined approaches to fight rectal cancer have succeeded in reducing the local recurrence (LR) rate and when there is LR it tends to appear later and less often in isolation. Moreover, a subtle change in the distribution of LRs with respect to the pelvis has been observed. In general terms, prior to total mesorectal excision the most common LRs were central types (perianastomotic and anterior) while lateral and posterior forms (presacral) have become more common since the growth in the use of combined treatments. No differences have been reported in the current pattern of LRs as a function of the type of approach used, that is, neo-adjuvant therapies (short-term or long-course radiotherapy, or chemoradiotherapy versus extended lymphadenectomy, though there is a trend towards posterior or presacral LR in patients in the Western world and lateral LR in Asia. Nevertheless, both may arise from the same mechanism. Moreover, as well as the mode of treatment, the type of LR is related to the height of the initial tumor. Nowadays most LRs are related to the advanced nature of the disease. Involvement of the circumferential radial margin and spillage of residual tumor cells from lymphatic leakage in the pelvic side wall are two plausible mechanisms for the genesis of LR. The patterns of pelvic recurrence itself (pelvic subsites) also have important implications for prognosis and are related to the potential success of salvage curative approach. The re-operability for cure and prognosis are generally better for anastomotic and anterior types than for presacral and lateral recurrences. Overall survival after LR diagnosis is lower with radio or chemoradiotherapy plus optimal surgery approaches, compared to optimal surgery alone.

Keywords: Rectal cancer, Local neoplasm recurrence pelvis, Pattern of recurrence multidisciplinary approach