Abstract
Background/Aim: We performed a retrospective multi-center cohort analysis to compare the outcomes of laparoscopic surgery vs. open surgery for obstructive colon cancer. Patients and Methods: A total of 455 patients with colon cancer with ileus underwent surgery at Yokohama City University Hospital and four related institutions from April 2000 to March 2016. Results: There were 414 cases in the open surgery group and 41 cases in the laparoscopic surgery group with no marked differences in the gender or age. The postoperative complication rate, according to the Clavien-Dindo classification, was lower in the laparoscopic group compared to the open surgery group. The postoperative hospital stay was 16 days in the open surgery group and 9 days in the laparoscopic surgery group (p=0.004). Among the various factors examined, the operation approach was identified as a statistically significant independent risk factor for postoperative complications (p=0.015). Conclusion: Preoperative treatment for colon cancer with ileus and elective laparoscopic surgery are thought to be useful for achieving curative treatment, avoiding colostomy, and shortening the length of hospital stay.
Colorectal cancer (CRC) remains the third most common cause of mortality and cancer-specific cause of death worldwide (1). It has been reported that 10%-29% of colon cancer have bowel obstruction (2-4). Emergency surgery, such as Hartmann's procedure or palliative diverting colostomy construction, is usually performed for obstructive CRC because of the high mortality rate of 10% to 28% and the high incidence of postoperative complications (5).
Laparoscopic-assisted colectomy is an established minimally invasive procedure first reported in 1991. However, in many cases with ileus, conventional open surgeries are often performed, due to the narrowness of the intraperitoneal working space and the risk of injuring the dilated intestinal tract during laparoscopic manipulation. Since local lesions with occlusion are often of an advanced stage and bulky, subsequent laparoscopic resection of tumors may be associated with increased technical difficulty, leading to increased rates of morbidity and conversion.
Recently, it has become possible to preoperatively decompress the intestinal tract using a transanal tube and perform elective surgery as a bridge to surgery without reducing the quality of life using a colonic stent for obstructive CRC. However, whether or not temporary bowel decompression by preoperative treatment, such as with a colonic stent and ileus tube, allows patients with colonic obstruction to undergo laparoscopic resection safely remains unclear.
In this study, we performed a retrospective multi-center cohort analysis to compare the outcomes of laparoscopic surgery vs. open surgery for obstructive colon cancer and evaluate the safety and usefulness of laparoscopic colectomy with preoperative decompression treatment.
Patients and Methods
Patients. This retrospective multi-center study was performed using data from a prospectively maintained database of patients with colon obstruction undergoing colorectal cancer surgery at the Yokohama City University, Department of Surgery, and its affiliated institutions between April 2008 and March 2018.
Surgical procedure. According to the guidelines of the 2016 Japanese Society for Cancer of the Colon and Rectum (6), radical colectomy and lymph node resection were performed. Hand-sewn functional end-to-end anastomosis was performed according to the tumor location.
Demographic and clinicopathological factors.
Definition of postoperative surgical complications. Postoperative surgical complications were retrospectively determined from the patients' records according to the Clavien-Dindo classification (7).
Evaluations and statistical analyses. The patients were divided into a laparoscopic-assisted surgery group and open surgery group. Pearson's chi-square test or Fisher's exact test was used to compare the baseline characteristics between the two groups. The risk factors for morbidity were analyzed by binominal logistic regression. Linear regression models were fitted to the multivariate analysis. p-Values of <0.05 were considered statistically significant.
The IBM SPSS (version 21.0; SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL, USA) software package was used for all statistical analyses. This study was approved by the Institutional Review Board of each institution.
Results
Patients. We evaluated 455 patients in the present study. Table I shows the clinicopathological characteristics of the patients. There were 414 cases in the open surgery group and 41 cases in the laparoscopic surgery group. The patients' ages ranged from 37-99 years (median: 73 years), and 235 patients were male while 219 were female. There was no marked difference in the body mass index between the two groups or in the American Society of Anesthesiologists physical status (ASA-PS) or Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group-Performance Status (ECOG-PS), although the laparoscopic surgery group patients were overall in a better condition than those in the open surgery group.
The surgical findings are shown in Table II. The laparoscopic surgery group showed a significantly longer surgery duration than the open surgery group (188 vs. 153 min, p=0.007) but significantly less blood loss (10 vs. 100 ml; p<0.001). In addition, the laparoscopic surgery group showed more cases of curative resection, although the difference was not statistically significant (82.5% vs. 70.0%, p=0.096), and more lymph nodes were dissected than in the open surgery group (23 vs. 17; p=0.004). Preoperative treatment for ileus (ileus tube: 112 cases, nasogastric tube: 2 cases, colonic stent: 28 cases) was performed more frequently in the laparoscopic surgery group than in the open surgery group (51.2% vs. 35.6%, p=0.049)
Operative results.
Short-term outcomes. Table III shows the clinical short-term outcomes. The rate of colostomy was significantly lower in the laparoscopic surgery group than in the open surgery group (5.0% vs. 24.8%, p=0.005). The postoperative complication rate was lower in the laparoscopic surgery group in all cases with a Clavien-Dindo classification than in the open surgery group. The postoperative hospital stay was significantly shorter in the laparoscopic surgery group than in the open surgery group (9 vs. 16 days, p=0.004).
Risk factors for surgical morbidity. The risk factors for surgical morbidity were analyzed by univariate and multivariate analyses using the pre- and postoperative factors. The results are shown in Table IV. Among the factors examined, the operation approach was identified as a statistically significant independent risk factor for postoperative complications (p=0.015).
Discussion
In this multicenter study, we retrospectively analyzed the clinical safety and technical feasibility of the elective laparoscopic approach with obstructing colon carcinoma, including the rate of colostomy, hospital stay, and postoperative complications. Conventional emergency Hartmann's operation and subsequent colostomy closure carries a high mortality and morbidity rate compared with elective operations (8). Placing an endoscopic stent for colonic obstruction can help avoid the need for emergency surgery and allow elective surgery to be performed.
Recent studies support the endoscopic placement of a colonic stent to relieve colonic obstruction (9). Colonic stents have been shown to be a highly effective and safe therapy for relieving colonic obstruction with less acute mortality and morbidity than in patients who undergo emergent surgical decompression for malignant colonic obstruction (10-12). In addition, decompression of the obstructed section of the colon after stent insertion allows patients to eat, and elective surgery can improve the nutritional status of patients.
Short-term outcomes.
In our study, the laparoscopic surgery group had a significantly longer operative time and less blood loss than the open surgery group. In addition, the laparoscopic surgery group had a higher rate of curative resection, and more lymph nodes were dissected compared to the open surgery group. Furthermore, treatment for preoperative colonic obstruction, such as colonic stent, avoided emergency surgery and allowed laparoscopic surgery to be scheduled.
Recently, colonic stents have been used to improve the safety of laparoscopic-assisted surgery for patients with obstructing CRC. The endoscopic release of the obstruction allows for the improvement of the patient's condition, which leads to more accurate preoperative staging and safer bowel preparation (13). The higher rate of lymph node harvest in the elective endo-laparoscopic group might reflect suboptimal oncologic surgery in the obstructed colon in an emergency setting, where surgeons might focus more on relieving the obstruction than on curing the cancer (14).
In our study, the laparoscopic group achieved better short-term postoperative results than the open surgery group. The rate of colostomy and the postoperative hospital stay were significantly shorter in the laparoscopic surgery group than in the open group. The reduced rate of permanent stoma creation in the laparoscopic group may translate to a better quality of life after surgery and a short hospital stay (15, 16). In addition, the postoperative complication rate for the laparoscopic surgery group was significantly lower than that for the open surgery group. Some studies have achieved similar results. Stipa et al. (17) have reported that the morbidity in the open surgery group was significantly higher than that in the laparoscopic-assisted surgery group, and Cheung et al. (18) have reported that primary anastomosis was possible in all elective laparoscopic surgery patients, including four cases of temporary ileostomy.
Uni- and Multi-variate Cox proportional hazards analysis of clinicopathological factors for complications.
Special attention is required when interpreting the current results, as there are some potential limitations associated with this study. First, this was a retrospective study. Our findings may therefore have been observed merely by chance in this series. Second, there may have been selection bias in the present study. Inexperienced surgeons or institutions might have avoided performing laparoscopic-assisted surgery in certain patients. Third, there was a time bias in this study, as the data were collected at institutions between 2008 and 2018. The surgical procedures and perioperative care might have changed over this period. Fourth, because the present study only analyzed on Eastern cohort, further studies should focus on a Western cohort. Given these limitations, the current results should be validated by another study.
In conclusion, laparoscopic-assisted colectomy with proper preoperative obstruction release for obstructing colonic carcinoma is safe and feasible. Compared with the open approach, the patients in our laparoscopic-assisted surgery group suffered less blood loss, avoided colostomy, and achieved a shortened hospital stay and possibly a lower morbidity rate.
Acknowledgements
This work was supported, in part, by the nongovernmental organization Yokohama Surgical Research Group, Dr. Masumi Kamachi (Tokyo Shinagawa Hospital), Dr. Ryuji Tominaga (Fukuoka Wajiro Hospital), Dr. Nobuko Yoshiki (Yoshiki Dermatology Clinic Ginza). The Authors express their sincere gratitude to Ms. Akiko Yoshida, Ms. Yuka Maruyama, Ms. Minako Igarashi and Ms. Mariko Yamauchi for their excellent data management in this study.
Footnotes
Authors' Contributions
Hiroshi Tamagawa and Toru Aoyama made substantial contributions to conception and design. Masakatsu Numata, Keisuke Kazama, Yukio Maezawa, Yosukea Atsumi, Kentaro Hara, Kazuki. Kanoa, Norio Yukawa, Hiroyuki Saeki, Teni Godai, Yasushi Rino, and Munetaka Masuda made substantial contributions to acquisition of data, or analysis and interpretation of data. Hiroshi Tamagawa and Toru Aoyama have been involved in drafting the manuscript or revising it critically for important intellectual content. Norio Yukawa, Toru Aoyama, Hiroshi Tamagawa, Yosuke Atsumi, and Shinnosuke Kawahara have given final approval of the version to be published. Each author should have participated sufficiently in the work to take public responsibility for appropriate portions of the content; and agreed to be accountable for all aspects of the work in ensuring that questions related to the accuracy or integrity of any part of the work are appropriately investigated and resolved. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.
This article is freely accessible online.
Conflicts of Interest
The Authors have no conflicts of interest to declare regarding this study.
- Received April 24, 2020.
- Revision received May 8, 2020.
- Accepted May 11, 2020.
- Copyright© 2020, International Institute of Anticancer Research (Dr. George J. Delinasios), All rights reserved