Rectal Cancer Clinical Trial
Official title:
IPC Status as a Surgical Quality Marker in Rectal Cancer Surgery
Risk of local recurrence after rectal surgery is nationally 8% after curative surgery to 5%.
Local recurrence rate after curative surgery varies between 3-7% in the variety of regions
in the country. It is well known that the surgical technique total mesorectal excision (TME)
has led to improved prognosis after rectal cancer surgery. TME surgery is difficult to
perform and different factors affect the quality of TME preparations. Injuries in mesorectal
fascia has been reported in up to 20% of patients who underwent TME surgery and most
surgeons agree that this may be important for recurrences. However, it is unclear to what
extent a damaged mesorectal fascia can be related to a worsening of prognosis in patients
with rectal cancer.
Adjuvant oncological treatment in form of chemotherapy after surgery, is offers patients
with unfavorable tumors based on the pathological examination. Patients with favorable
tumors (less advanced) are not offered chemotherapy, even if the surgical technique was not
optimal, ie. that there is damage in the mesorectal fascia, as evidence for this is lacking.
The presence of intraperitoneal cancer cells (IPC) is related to histopathological tumor
stage of colorectal cancer. Incidence of IPC of intraperitoneal tumors (rectal cancer
patients with tumors below the peritoneal reflection) is unclear.
Assessment of IPC status with cytology and immunohistochemistry is technically easy and
could after TME surgery identify those patients who have an increased risk of tumor
recurrence. In a positive IPC status, the patient would possibly benefit from either
postoperative radiotherapy if the patient did not receive preoperative therapy, or
postoperative oncological chemotherapy.
Tumour cells may be lysed in sterile water, and some surgeons rinse the abdominal cavity and
the bowel distally to the tumour. Neither rinsing the abdomen or rectum in colorectal cancer
is routinely occurring and the clinical benefit has not been established. The value of
rinsing the abdomen after TME-surgery could also be studied by IPC status.
The study hypothesis is that the IPC status is dependent on the surgical quality of the
specimen after TME-surgery in rectal cancer patients, and its presence leads to increased
risk of local recurrence.
| Status | Recruiting |
| Enrollment | 50 |
| Est. completion date | September 2014 |
| Est. primary completion date | March 2014 |
| Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
| Gender | Both |
| Age group | 18 Years and older |
| Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - rectal cancer patients that are going to be operated with bowel resection - control patients (10 patients) - patients with different conditions that are going to be operated. Exclusion Criteria: |
Observational Model: Cohort, Time Perspective: Prospective
| Country | Name | City | State |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sweden | Mälarsjukhuset Eskilstuna | Eskilstuna | |
| Sweden | Västmanlands sjukhus | Västerås |
| Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
|---|---|
| Uppsala University |
Sweden,
Kristensen AT, Wiig JN, Larsen SG, Giercksky KE, Ekstrøm PO. Molecular detection (k-ras) of exfoliated tumour cells in the pelvis is a prognostic factor after resection of rectal cancer? BMC Cancer. 2008 Jul 27;8:213. doi: 10.1186/1471-2407-8-213. — View Citation
Maeda K, Maruta M, Hanai T, Sato H, Horibe Y. Irrigation volume determines the efficacy of "rectal washout". Dis Colon Rectum. 2004 Oct;47(10):1706-10. — View Citation
Noura S, Ohue M, Seki Y, Yano M, Ishikawa O, Kameyama M. Long-term prognostic value of conventional peritoneal lavage cytology in patients undergoing curative colorectal cancer resection. Dis Colon Rectum. 2009 Jul;52(7):1312-20. doi: 10.1007/DCR.0b013e31 — View Citation
Skipper D, Cooper AJ, Marston JE, Taylor I. Exfoliated cells and in vitro growth in colorectal cancer. Br J Surg. 1987 Nov;74(11):1049-52. — View Citation
Uras C, Altinkaya E, Yardimci H, Göksel S, Yavuz N, Kaptanoglu L, Akçal T. Peritoneal cytology in the determination of free tumour cells within the abdomen in colon cancer. Surg Oncol. 1996 Oct-Dec;5(5-6):259-63. — View Citation
| Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary | IPC status | Occurence of cancer cells per 100 mesothelial cell for the sample taken at the start of the surgery (sample 1). After completion of the TME-Surgery (sample 2) and after rinsing the abdomen (sample 3). The outcome will be assessed and presented when all patients are included (approximately dec 2013). |
One year | No |
| Secondary | TME quality | The surgeon grades the mesorectal completeness in a four grade scale. | Day 1 | No |
| Secondary | local recurrence | occurence of local recurrence. | 3-5 years after operation | No |
| Secondary | Survival | after 3-5 years | No |
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