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Clinical Research Papers:

Long-term outcomes and propensity score matching analysis: rectal cancer resection for patients with elevated preoperative risk

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Oncotarget. 2017; 8:25679-25690. https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.13827

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Hao Feng, Tobias S. Schiergens, Zhi-hai Mao, Jingkun Zhao, Xiaohui Shen, Ai-Guo Lu _ and Wolfgang E. Thasler

Abstract

Hao Feng1,2, Tobias S. Schiergens2, Zhi-hai Mao1, Jingkun Zhao1,2, Xiaohui Shen1, Ai-Guo Lu1 and Wolfgang E. Thasler3

1 Department of Digestive Surgery, Ruijin Hospital, Shanghai Jiao-tong University School of Medicine, Shanghai, China

2 Department of General, Visceral, Transplant, and Vascular Surgery, University Hospital of Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, Munich, Germany

3 Department of General and Visceral Surgery, Red Cross Hospital of Munich, Munich, Germany

Correspondence to:

Ai-guo Lu, email:

Hao Feng, email:

Keywords: laparoscopy; rectal cancer; operative risk; Cr-POSSUM system; complications

Received: July 20, 2016 Accepted: October 17, 2016 Published: December 09, 2016

Abstract

BACKGROUND: It is still controversial about the treatment strategy for rectal cancer patients with elevated operative risk and elder rectal cancer patients.

METHODS: This study presented a retrospective single center experience in rectal cancer proctectomy for high operative risk patients. High operative risk patient was defined as Cr-POSSUM > 5% combined with associated risk factors. 220 in 1477 consecutive patients met the inclusion criteria.

RESULTS: 132 patients were selected (66:66) after propensity score matching. The total complication rate between conventional open rectal resection (71 %) and laparoscopic surgery (41%) was significantly different (p = 0.0005). There is a significantly positive correlation between open surgery and advanced Dindo Classification (p = 0.02). Cr-POSSUM is positively correlated with Dindo Classification (p = 0.01). There was no significant difference in survival rate among stage I~II, different age groups or different Cr-POSSUM score sub-groups. However, stage III-IV tumor patients in laparoscopic group experienced improved overall survival rate. (p < 0.0001). For patients with preoperative pulmonary or renal disease, patients in laparoscopic group also had better long term prognosis (p = 0.03, p = 0.049).

CONCLUSIONS: The results demonstrate the potential advantages of laparoscopic rectal cancer resection for high operative risk patients, especially for the patients with preoperative respiratory or renal disease and stage III cancer.


INTRODUCTION

Rectal cancer is associated with substantial morbidity and mortality, especially in elder patients and those with co-morbidities. Outcome after these surgeries depends both on modifiable factors, such as perioperative medical care, and on physiological tolerance of surgical trauma. Over the last two decades, we have seen a continuous improvement of the quality of laparoscopic surgery in rectal cancer, especially in specialized centers with longstanding experience and high annual volumes. Several studies that compared laparoscopic and conventional open resection for rectal cancer show no difference with respect to local recurrence or overall and disease-free survival after 3, 5 [1, 2] even 10 years [3], respectively. More recently, long-term data including the MRC CR07 [4], MRC CLASICC trial, Comparison of Open versus laparoscopic surgery for mid or low Rectal cancer After Neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy (COREAN) trial [5], the Colorectal cancer laparoscopic or Open Resection (COLOR II) trial [6] have released long-term survival rates. Though some of the randomized control trials have included patients with elevated preoperative risk (American Society of Anesthesiologists classification 3 and 4), these patients were generally recruited to clinical trials less often than younger patients and therefore are under-represented in publications about cancer treatment [7]. Because of this heterogeneous, can these recommendations from major studies, such as laparoscopic rectal operations are safe and sound, be extrapolated to the fragile subset of patients with more comorbidity or do they need to be modified? The aim of this study is to analysis the survival and outcomes in patients with rectal cancer associated with high operative risk in conventional open rectal resection group (OpS) and laparoscopic rectal resection group (LaPS).

Materials and Methods

Patients

This study included all 1477 consecutive patients undergoing radical surgical resection for rectal cancer in a tertiary referral teaching hospital - Shanghai Ruijin Hospital between September 2007 and Nov 2011. 220 patients were considered with high operative risk. Patients were admitted to Gastrointestinal Surgical Centre or Minimally Invasive Surgical Centre. Both centers belong to Department of General Surgery. The operative conditions, anesthesia management as well as perioperative management were at the same level. Both surgical teams had the same operative quality of rectal cancer. Emergency protectomy was excluded.

Diagnoses and tumor stage

The diagnoses were made preoperatively and then confirmed by postoperative pathology. The tumor node metastasis (TNM) staging of colon and rectal cancer system (American Joint Committee on Cancer Manual, 7th edition) was used. The criteria for neoadjuvant radiochemotherapy were patients with rectal cancer of the lower and middle third of the rectum and suspected T3 or T4 tumors and patients with pathological lymph nodes as demonstrated by CT or MRI-scan.

Surgical procedures and quality control

Patient demographics were extracted routinely by trained registrars from the hospital records. Patients were assigned preoperatively to the laparoscopic or open approach based on clinical criteria and imaging, including chest radiograph, abdominal computed tomography, and colonoscopy etc. Patients’ preference had also been considered. Conversion cases were deemed necessary remained in the laparoscopic surgery group for all outcomes by intention-to-treat analysis. The preoperative preparation and the techniques of the procedures were described previously. With our experience from open total mesorectal excision, laparoscopic surgery was performed according to the same oncologic principles [8, 9]. Briefly, laparoscopic surgery was done with five trocars, the rectum was mobilized with monopolar cautery or an ultrasonic scalpel, dissecting between the visceral and parietal pelvic fascia without injuring the hypogastric nerves. Laparoscopic and open procedures were performed by four senior surgeons with their specialist team from the division of Gastrointestinal Surgery or division of Minimally Invasive Surgery in Ruijin Hospital. In the LapS group, surgery was performed by a systemic team of surgeons with abundant experience and expertise in conventional colorectal surgery and laparoscopic skills. In the OpS group, another fixed group of experienced surgeons specializing in colorectal surgery executed the surgery. [9]

Statistical methods

Analyses were performed with Stat View 5.0 for Windows (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC, USA). The Х2 test or Fisher’s exact test was applied to analyze the categorical variables. The results were subjected to a nonparametric Mann-Whitney U test. A Student’s t-test was also used to analyze the intragroup differences. The Kaplan-Meier method was used to analyze the overall survival of patients; the log-rank test was used to compare patient survival between groups. Cox-regression model was used for multivariate analysis. Logistic regression was used to analyze the correlation of Cr-POSSUM and Dindo-Demartines-Clavien Classification. P < 0.05 was regarded as statistically significant.

Propensity score matching

Propensity score matching was applied to reduce the effect of treatment selection bias and potential confounding effect, thereby creating a quasi-randomized experiment. This matching is done using a generalized SAS macro that matches Ops to LapS at a 1:1 ratio, using an algorithm to maximize the number of propensity score match. Patients were selected based on this score calculating for baseline characteristics; that is age, gender, tumor size, tumor location, tumor stage, Cr-possum value and radiochemotherapy at baseline in patients.

Risk evaluation

Patients with a predicted Colorectal Physiologic and Operative Severity Score for the enumeration of Mortality and Morbidity (Cr-POSSUM) ≥5% OR criteria below [10] were managed as ‘high operative risk’:

1. Aged > 60 years

PLUS undergoing re-do surgery

OR have acute or chronic renal impairment (sCr > 130 μmol/L)

OR have diabetes mellitus

OR are strongly suspected clinically to have any significant risk factor for the cardiac or respiratory disease. (e. g. chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, history of ischemic heart disease, congestive heart failure, arrhythmias, angina pectoris, or cardiac risk index > 12 etc.)

2. have shock of any cause, any age group.

Cr-POSSUM scores were calculated for each patient retrospectively from their medical records. The calculating software is freely available on the internet (http://www.riskprediction.org.uk/index-cr.php, Risk Prediction in Surgery)

RESULTS

There was no significant difference between each group concerning the age (69±11.2 vs 68±12.1 years old, p = 0.5907). The Body mass index (BMI) were 28.1kg/m2 and 27.9kg/m2 (p = 0.437). The tumor size was 3.60±1.58cm and 3.57±0.84cm, respectively (p = 0.916), and located in 6.18cm and 6.36cm from the anal verge. The tumor stage, postoperative radiochemotherapy, circumferential resection margin ( < 2mm) positivity (LapS 1of 66 [2%] vs OpS 1 of 66 [2%]), distal margin, macroscopic completeness of the resection (incomplete rate: LapS 9% vs OpS 10%), locoregional recurrence rate (LapS 4of 66 [6%] vs OpS 5 of 66 [8%]) did not differ between laparoscopic and open surgery groups.

Operative risk

The distribution of ages and Cr-POSSUM were showed in Table 1. 37 patients (56%) in OpS group were with a Cr-POSSUM score ≥10%, 13 patients (20% in total) of which were with a Cr-POSSUM score ≥20%; while in LapS group, the amount of patients with score above 10% and 20% were 30 patients (45%) and 15 patients (22%), respectively. Concerning the 4 patients whose scores were below 5% in OpS group, three patients were older than 50 years old with pulmonary dysfunction, one patient was 59 years old undergoing re-do surgery. In LapS group, three in five patients were beyond 50 years old combining with pulmonary dysfunction; one was with chronic renal impairment; one patient experienced re-do surgery. In total, there were 3 and 2 patients in each group underwent re-do surgery, eighteen and twelve patients suffered from acute or chronic renal impairment, thirteen and eight patients were suffering from diabetes mellitus in OpS and LapS group, respectively. 50%, 50% patients in OpS group and 32%, 33% patients were suffering from Cardiac and respiratory disease, respectively. 3% patients in the open surgery group have cerebrovascular disease. Generally speaking, there was no significant difference between the two groups in preoperative risk.

Table 1: The patient demographics and histopathological tumor assessment

Clinical or pathologic feature

OpS (n= 66)

LapS (n= 66)

P-value

95%CI

Sex ratio ( Male: Female)

45:22

46:21

0.85

-0.1794-0.1491

Age (years)

69±11.2

68±12.1

0.59

-2.984-5.196

Body mass index (kg/m2)

28.1

27.9

0.44

pTumor stage (AJCC)

I

18

17

IIA

17

10

IIIB

6

12

IIIA

3

5

0.85

-0.2982-0.3588

IIIB

10

12

IIIC

4

7

IV

8

3

Lymph node metastasis

N0

42

40

0.81

N1

15

17

N≥2

9

9

Tumor size (diameter, cm)

3.60±1.58

3.57±0.84

0.92

-0.3812-0.4239

Tumor location from anal verge (cm)

6.18±1.94

6.36±2.06

0.54

-0.5259-0.9978

Low-rectal (0~5cm)

23

35

Mid-rectal (6~10cm)

40

26

Upper-rectal (>10cm)

3

5

Type of surgery

APR

44

49

LAR

18

15

0.28

Others

4

2

Chemo-and/or radiotherapy

23

26

0.61

-0.2204-0.1294

Stoma formed

No

23

21

Ileostomy

20

29

0.58

Colostomy

23

16

Resection margin

R0

65

65

R1

1

1

--

Total mesorectal excision

Complete

46

38

Nearly complete

11

17

0.52

Unknown

3

4

Incomplete

6

7

Postoperative complications and outcomes

The postoperative complications included surgical complications as well as general complications. Surgical complications contain anastomotic leakage [11], ileus, intra-abdominal abscess, urological or perineal wound complications, fistula, hemorrhage and deep vein thrombosis (Table 2). And there were no significant differences between two groups except that laparoscopic group has a significant lower wound complication rate (2 vs 9). General complications include cardiac, respiratory, neurological and renal complications, Ascites etc. Cardiac complications happened in 4 and 3 patients respectively in OpS and LapS groups, containing postoperative heart failure, arrhythmia, angina and ischemic heart diseases, while, the number of patients in the laparoscopic group with respiratory complications was significantly lower (p = 0.03). Notably, the total complication rate between conventional open rectal resection (71 %) and laparoscopic surgery (41%) showed a significant difference (p = 0.0005). 2 cases (3%) in the LapS group were converted to open surgery in the present study.

Table 2: Preoperative risk, postoperative complications and other outcomes

Clinical or pathologic feature

OpS (n=66)

LapS (n=66)

P-value

Preoperative risk

Cr-possum Score

~ 10 percent

29

36

10 ~ 20 percent

24

15

0.65

20~ percent

13

15

Undergoing re-do surgery

3

2

Acute or chronic renal impairment

18

12

0.30

Diabetes

13

8

0.34

Cardiac disease

33

21

0.051

Respiratory disease

33

22

0.08

Cerebrovascular disease

2

1

-

Dindo-Demartines-Clavien Classification

Dindo 1

33

41

Dindo 2

24

9

0.92

Dindo 3

7

14

Dindo 4

2

2

Surgical complications

Anastomotic leakage

5

6

-

Prolong ileus

1

1

-

Intra-abdominal abscess

2

1

-

Urological complication

6

5

-

(transurethrale catheter-related problem, urinary tract infection/retension, ureter leakage)

Perineal wound complication

9

2

0.03

(wound dehiscence, wound infections, wound necrosis, abscess or delayed wound healing)

perforation

1

1

-

Gastrointestinal haemorrhage

2

3

-

Rectal stump abscess

4

1

0.37

DVT

0

1

-

General complications

Cardiac complication

4

3

-

Respiratory complication

10

2

0.03

Neurological symptoms

1

0

-

Renal complication

3

0

0.24

Ascites

0

1

-

Return to normal bowel function

5.5

4.0

30-day mortality

1

0

-

Cr-POSSUM=Colorectal Physiologic and Operative Severity Score for the enumeration of Mortality and Morbidity. DVT, deep vein thrombosis

The correlation analysis of Cr-POSSUM and dindo-demartines-clavien classification

There is no significant difference between laparoscopic surgery and conventional surgical procedure in the distribution of Dindo-Demartines-Clavien Classification (p = 0.92). There is a significant positive correlation between open surgery and the Dindo-Demartines-Clavien Classification (Estimate = 0.7495, p= 0.02, 95%CI 1.102~4.062). In addition, Cr-POSSUM is positively correlated with Dindo-Demartines-Clavien Classification (Estimate = 0.0458, p = 0.01, 95%CI 1.010~1.085).

5-year overall survival, disease-free survival and disease-specific survival rates of different tumor stages and Cr-POSSUM score sub-groups

The median follow-up is 49.5 months. Using Log-rank analysis, no difference could be found between patients undergoing laparoscopic and open rectal resection in stage I~II (p = 0.13, HR 0.5565, 95%CI 0.26-1.19), whereas the overall survival rate was statistically significantly higher in LapS group with stage III-IV tumor (p < 0.0001, HR 0.70, 95%CI 0.27-1.79) Figure 1. We further used Cox regression to analyze the 132 patients; it also showed patients undergoing laparoscopic rectal resection had a better overall survival rate.

5-year overall survival rates of Different Tumor Stages.

Figure 1: 5-year overall survival rates of Different Tumor Stages. After Log-rank analysis, no difference could be found between patients undergoing laparoscopic and open rectal resection in stage I~II (p = 0.13, HR 0.5565, 95%CI 0.26-1.19, Figure1A), whereas the overall survival rate was statistically significantly higher in LapS group with stage III-IV tumor (p < 0.0001, HR 0.70, 95%CI 0.27-1.79, Figure1B)

The 5- year overall survival curves of patients in different Cr-POSSUM score sub-groups are shown in Figure 2D, 2E, 2F. The actuarial survivals of the laparoscopic and open groups with Cr-POSSUM valuing 10~20% was without significantly different (p = 0.12, HR 2.02, 95%CI 0.83-4.90), so was for patients with Cr-POSSUM below 10% (p = 0.46) or above 20% (p = 0.64). The 5-year disease-free survival and disease specific survival are showed in Table 3.

Table 3: Disease free survival, disease specific survival and overall survival

Subgroup

5-year survival

HR(95%CI)

p

Stage I~II

Disease free survival

LapS

76.7%

0.58(0.28~1.19)

0.14

OpS

89.1%

Disease specific survival

LapS

74.1%

0.63(0.29~1.36)

0.24

OpS

88.6%

Stage III~IV

Disease free survival

LapS

60%

5.14(2.27~11.68)

<0.0001

OpS

38.4%

Disease specific survival

LapS

62.1%

5.57(2.42~12.81)

<0.0001

OpS

38.4%

Preoperative respiratory disease

Disease free survival

LapS

82.5%

0.40(0.18~0.87)

0.02

OpS

64.6%

Disease specific survival

LapS

86.4%

0.45(.020~1.04)

0.047

OpS

73.3%

Preoperative renal disease

Disease free survival

LapS

80.9%

0.41(0.15~1.12)

0.049

OpS

59.9%

Disease specific survival

LapS

81.9%

0.38(0.13~1.15)

0.06

OpS

61.6%

Preoperative cardiac disease

Disease free survival

LapS

71.9%

0.98(0.41~2.37)

0.98

OpS

75.6%

Disease specific survival

LapS

75.2%

0.81(0.32~2.09)

0.68

OpS

76.9%

Cr-POSSUM<10

Disease free survival

LapS

84.2%

0.68(0.27~1.70)

0.40

OpS

89.1%

Disease specific survival

LapS

84.2%

2.34(1.08~5.07)

0.43

OpS

82.9%

Cr-POSSUM 10~20

Disease free survival

LapS

73.8%

1.39(0.48~4.01)

0.54

OpS

66.5%

Disease specific survival

LapS

73.8%

1.28(0.43~3.78)

0.66

OpS

68.8%

Cr-POSSUM >20

Disease free survival

LapS

63.6%

1.44(0.54~3.82)

0.46

OpS

61.1%

Disease specific survival

LapS

72.5%

2.49(0.81~7.64)

0.11

OpS

57.6%

>75

Disease free survival

LapS

64.4%

0.89(0.42~1.89)

0.76

OpS

60.7%

Disease specific survival

LapS

69.4%

0.66(0.29~1.42)

0.32

OpS

59.1%

<75

Disease free survival

LapS

62.9%

0.79(0.36~1.72)

0.55

OpS

60.8%

Disease specific survival

LapS

62.9%

0.79(0.36~1.72)

0.55

OpS

60.8%

Overall survival rates of patients with preoperative diseases or patients in different Cr-POSSUM score sub-groups.

Figure 2: Overall survival rates of patients with preoperative diseases or patients in different Cr-POSSUM score sub-groups. A.-C., the overall survival rates of patients with cardiovascular, pulmonary and renal diseases. D.- F., The 5- year survival curves of patients in different Cr-POSSUM score sub-groups.

Overall survival, disease-free survival and disease-specific survival rates of patients with preoperative cardiac, renal or respiratory diseases

The overall survival rates of patients with cardiovascular, pulmonary and renal diseases are shown in Figure 2A, 2B, 2C. In patients with the preoperative pulmonary disease, the 5-year overall survival rates of all stages and every different stage in these two groups were significantly different (p = 0.03 [OS], p = 0.02 [DFS]), while in patients with cardiovascular disease, the 5-year overall survivals were not significantly different (p = 0.9). For patients with the preoperative renal disease, the 5-year overall survival rates benefit from laparoscopic surgery with a significant difference. (p = 0.049), however, the disease-specific survival was not significantly different.

Furthermore, although people older than 75 years account for only 5~10% of the overall population in developed countries and some developing countries, 35~45% of patients with rectal cancer are in this age group. This proportion may increase in the future because of demographics of an aging population, and increases in life expectancy [12]. Thus, we separated the patients into two sub-groups (~75, > 75) by age (LapS 23 of 66 [35 %] > 75y, OpS 26 of 66 [39%] > 75y). The overall survival rate (Figure 3), disease-free survival rate, disease specific survival rate and the complication rate (not show) did not differ significantly in each group.

The overall survival rates in age sub-groups (~75, &gt; 75).

Figure 3: The overall survival rates in age sub-groups (~75, > 75).

DISCUSSION

Recently, the continual innovations of surgical approach are a major step towards the idea of personalized medicine, we should notice that it is still controversial about the treatment strategy for elderly patients with rectal tumor and those with elevated operative risk. Especially for patients with elevated operative risk, patients are most vulnerable when their pre-existing comorbidities make them susceptible to perioperative risk [13, 14, 15].

The COREAN trial demonstrated similar disease-free survival (Lap79.2% vs Open 72.5%) and overall survival rates (Lap 91.7% vs Open 90.4%). The 3-year disease-free survival rate (Lap74.8% vs Open 70.8%) and overall survival rates were similar between both approaches in COLOR II trial as well. More recently, American College of Surgeons Oncology Group [ACOSOG] Z6051 trial [16] and Australasian Laparoscopic Cancer of the Rectum Randomized Clinical Trial [AlaCaRT] [17] investigated the non-inferiority of minimally invasive compared with open pelvic dissection for rectal cancer patients. The results suggest that a laparoscopic resection may not be oncologically justified in many patients requiring protectomy for rectal cancer. However, it was also reported that the follow-up studies to the ACOSOG Z6051 and ALaCaRT trials may show that long-term oncologic outcome are not compromised by a laparoscopic approach and slightly favorable outcomes might be seen as demonstrated by the COREAN and COLOR II trials. Other randomized trials and systematic reviews have also reported that laparoscopic and open proctectomy have similar oncological outcomes [18].However, little solid evidence exists in support of laparoscopic or open proctectomy for patients with high operative risk, although some literature showed that perioperative morbidity did not differ between two groups (Table 4).

It is well accepted that laparoscopic approach is equivalent in the treatment of rectal cancer and shows advantages of shorter hospitalization and faster recovery, lower blood loss and lower complications rates [19], especially in patients with low rectal cancer [20, 21, 22].

Pulmonary comorbidities have been considered as an independent predictor of poor outcome in patients undergoing colectomy and appear to be enhanced in patients with chronic renal diseases. Chronic kidney diseases require dialysis is also a known surgical risk factor that in bowel resection increases the risk of death nearly 6-fold and doubles the complication rate. Therefore, some literature suggests laparoscopic surgery is not attempted for these patients considering their body habitus or longer operative time or creation of pneumoperitoneum which may be potentially associated with adverse pathophysiological changes, including hypercapnia, reduced venous return. However, in this study, patients with preoperative respiratory diseases and renal diseases benefit from laparoscopic surgery, which was consistent with previous reports. The reasons might be lower pain rate, less complication rate in laparoscopic surgery, and also it might be attributable to the enhanced post-operative recovery of lung function in laparoscopic group [23, 24]. Besides, a lung-protective PEEP during pneumoperitoneum might be also valuable for preventing intratidal recruitment/derecruitment [25].

Presently, better preoperative risk assessment should be introduced, objective and accurate evaluation of risk should become routine procedures, those would be helpful to predict and avoid postoperative complications by selecting the appropriate surgical approach. Cr-POSSUM model is a promising specialized tool for monitoring surgical outcomes in colorectal cancer surgery, which might be more accurate than P-POSSUM score [26, 27] in pre-operative use. In present research, patients suffering stage III/IV tumor with a laparoscopic surgery (60%) had primarily a significantly better outcome than patients undergoing open surgery (38.4%), as compared with DFS rates of 64.9% after laparoscopic surgery and 52.0% after open surgery among patients with stage III disease in the COREAN study. There was no significant difference in different Cr-POSSUM subgroups. Other study findings showed that elder patients might benefit most from improved short-term postoperative outcomes following the laparoscopic surgery [28]. Our research did not indicate significant improvements in the overall survival in different age group. The comparable survival rates were reported in series of literature. But the present study showed superior survival in laparoscopic resection, especially in stage III/IV cancers. We reviewed recent researchers: in 2010, the UK MRC CLASICC trial demonstrated that the 5-year overall survival rate (OSR) was 60.3% for laparoscopic rectal resection versus 52.9% for open surgery. Feliciotti´s group [29] (62.5%vs 60.6%), Ng et al [30] (63.9 %vs 55%), Law´s group [31] (71.1%vs 59.3%), Jayne et al [32] (60.3%vs 52.9%) and Baik et al [33] (90.8% vs 88.5%) all presented a better 5-year OSR for laparoscopic rectal resection, though the differences were not significant. Recently, it was reported that laparoscopic resection is associated with more favorable 5-year OS in stage II and III cancer [34, 35]. These results were not influenced by postoperative chemotherapy, which was given similarly after both approaches, especially for stage III cancer. The lower complication rate associated with laparoscopic resection might contribute to the better OS, this reason is more pronounced in the patients with high preoperative risk [36, 37, 38, 39]. Given the increased mortality and morbidity, all efforts should be made to medically optimize these patients preoperatively. One of the limitations of this study is the sample number, though the estimated power was 0.8 (α = 5%). For an instant, only a few patients with diabetes or cerebrovascular diseases were involved in the analyses which still need to be further improved under larger sample amount. Although a randomized controlled trial should be conducted to confirm the findings of the present study, the authors believe that the present study is of value in proposing the future studies.

Table 4: Recent comparative series in advanced rectal cancer

Reference

Year

Lap: Open

Follow up

Stage

Survival

P value

Park et al

2009

170:374

36m (2-75)

1-3

3-year DFS lap 77.5%

0.29

Open 82.6%

Laurent et al

2009

238:233

52m(1-151)

1-3

5-year DFS lap 82%

NS

Open 79%

3

5-year DFS lap ~69%

NS

Open ~69%

3

5-year OS lap ~72%

0.02

Open ~52%

Law et al

2009

111:310

34m

3

5-year OS lap 56.6%

0.33

Open 50%

Li et al

2011

113:123

74.8m

3

5-year OS lap 66.7%

0.85

Open 70.3%

1-3

5-year OS lap 77.9%

0.91

Open 78.9%

Liang et al

2011

69:174

Until 3 year

1-3

3-year OS

NS

Baik et al

2011

54:108

Until 5 year

3

5-year OS lap 91.7%

0.30

Open 77.2%

3

5-year DFS lap ~58.8%

0.63

Open ~51.5%

Law et al

2012

814:1197

40.3m

3

5-year OS lap ~58%

0.18

Open ~48%

Parket al

2013

404:404

Until 3 years

1-3

5-year OS lap 82.1%

0.44

Open 81.3%

3

5-year OS lap ~70%

0.26

Open ~73%

3

5-year DFS lap ~69%

0.18

Open ~59%

Asoglu et al

2013

513:0

31m(7-64)

3

5-year OS lap ~70%

-

Good et al30

2013

130:0

40m

3

5-year OS lap 75.6%

-

4

5-year OS lap 53.8%

-

Ng SS et al

2014

136:142

Until 10 years

1-3

10-year OS lap ~58%

Open ~48%

3

10-year RR lap 25.8%

0.08

Open 43.2%

Reibetanz et al29

2014

170:170

48m vs 46m

1-3

3-year OS

NS

Bonjer et al

( COLORII )

2015

699:345

Until 3 year

1-3

3-year OS lap 86.7%

Open 83.6%

DFS lap 74.8%

Open 70.8%

RR lap 5%

Open 5%

NS

NS

NS

Jeong et al

(COREAN)

2015

170:170

Until 3 year

1-4

3-year OS lap 91.7%

Open 90.4%

DFS lap 79.2%

Open 72.2%

NS

NS

OS, overall survival; DFS, disease free survival; RR, recurrence rate

Author contributions

Lu AG, Thasler WE revised, partly designed and finally approved the article to be published. Feng H, Lu AG, designed the research and performed the follow-up study; Feng H, performed the clinical research with Mao ZH; Feng H, Zhao JK, and Schiergens T analyzed the data and wrote the manuscript.

conflict of interest

This work was supported by grants from China Scholarship Council and DAAD German Academic funding and Shanghai National Science Foundation (124119a0900). There is no conflict of interest.

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