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  Vol. 143 No. 9, September 2008 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Treatment Strategies and Outcomes for Rectal Villous Adenoma From a Single-Center Experience

Sungeyun David Cho, MD; Daniel O. Herzig, MD; Miriam A. Douthit, MA; Karen E. Deveney, MD

Arch Surg. 2008;143(9):866-872.

Objectives  To analyze a 13-year, single-surgeon experience with villous adenoma of the rectum with respect to procedure, complications, recurrence, and cancer incidence.

Design  Retrospective review of patient and tumor characteristics, procedure, recurrence, and complications.

Setting  University hospital.

Patients  Patients who underwent excision of rectal villous adenoma.

Main Outcome Measures  Complication, recurrence, and malignancy rates.

Results  Thirty-six patients underwent 30 transanal and 10 transabdominal excisions. Mean age was 66 years (range, 41-86 years) and mean follow-up was 25 months (range, 0.5-132 months). Mean tumor size was 3.0 cm (range, 0.5-11 cm) and the mean distance of the tumor from the anal verge was 4.9 cm (range, 0-10 cm). Preoperatively, 18 (45%) lesions harbored low-grade dysplasia while 17 (43%) had high-grade dysplasia. Postoperative pathology was discordant in 50% of patients, including 5 of 40 lesions (13%) that were recategorized as invasive cancer. Tumor size did not correlate with malignancy. The complication rate was significantly lower in transanal compared with transabdominal excisions (3.6% vs 50%, P = .005). There were 4 (12.5%) benign recurrences, all after transanal excisions.

Conclusions  Complete excision is warranted for rectal villous adenomas, as biopsies were accurate only 50% of the time, and 1 in 8 patients had unsuspected cancer found after excision. Transanal excision with negative margins is associated with low recurrence and complication rates and is the preferred approach, even with large lesions.


Author Affiliations: Oregon Health & Science University, Portland.







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