Title: Colorectal Cancer
1Colorectal Cancer
- Assessment Management
- Orla Dunlea
- Surgical Resident
2The Facts
- It is common
- 80 Australians die each week from colon cancer
- 1/12 of us will be diagnosed with it in our
lifetime - It is preventable
- 90 is treatable if detected early enough
- Currently lt40 is detected in the early stages
3Who develops colon cancer?
- MF
- Peak incidence at 65 years
- Family history
- Ulcerative colitis x 8-10 years
- History of polyps
- Fibre intake? (Proposed by Burkitt Irish)
- Aspirin reduces risk
4Polyps
- Morphological term protrudes from the bowel
wall into the lumen - Pedunculated
- Sessile
- Villous
- Most malignant potential
- Frond-like
- Mucus-secreting which may be presenting complaint
or low K
- Tubulovillous
- Most common type
- Pedunculated
- Tubular
- Least malignant potential
- Polyps found in FAP
5Polyps on colonoscopy
6Colon cancer on colonoscopy
7How does it present?
- Right sided
- Anaemia
- RIF mass
- Dont tend to cause obstruction (unless the
ileocaecal valve is involved) as diameter is
greater than left stool is more liquid
- Left sided
- Change in bowel habit
- PR bleeding
- Tenesmus (lower rectal lesion)
- Pericolic abscess erodes through the bowel
wall, LIF pain, tender swinging pyrexia - Large bowel obstruction acute presentation
- Presentation with mets
- Obstructive jaundice nodes compressing porta
hepaticus - Ureteric or duodenal obstruction
retroperitoneal lymph nodes - Weight loss, anorexia, hepatomegaly due to liver
mets
8On Examination
- Signs of anaemia
- Weight loss
- Abdo exam
- Normal
- Palpable mass
- Hepatomegaly due to mets
- Ascites
- PR exam
- Mass
- Local extension into pouch of douglas
- Amount of fixation to local structures
- FOB
9Investigations
- Bloods
- CEA
- HB
- LFTs
- Barium enema
- Colonoscopy
- Visualise tumour
- Biopsy tumour
- Look for other tumours/polyps
- /- stenting if palliative
- If histology confirmed
- Imaging
- U/S for liver Mets
- CT thorax/abdo/pelvis with contrast for staging
- MRI /endoanal U/S for rectal CA (if MRI
incompatible)
10Scope
11Liver metastasis
12Barium enema
Apple core lesion
13Candidate for surgery?
- Stage of cancer is it operable?
- QOL life expectancy prior to surgery
- Does the patient want surgery?
- Suitable for anaesthetic- anaesthetic review
- Co-morbidities IHD, DM, COPD etc
- Are risks of complications too high?
- Nutrition and ability to heal
14Pre-operative work up
- Routine bloods FBC, UEs, LFTs, Coag
- Group cross match
- CEA for baseline
- CXR
- Consent
- /-bowel prep
- NPO
- Catheter
- IVABs
- TEDS
- (Radiotherapy)
- (Chemotherapy)
- (Stoma education)
- (Stoma positioning)
- (PFTs)
- (Echo/cardiac mibi/ coronary angio)
15Surgery
16Right hemi-colectomy
Caecal R colon tumours
17Extended right hemi-colectomy
- Proximal or mid-transverse colon tumours
18Left hemicolectomy
Splenic flexure and left colon tumours
19Sigmoid colectomy
Sigmoid tumours
20Abdomino-perineal resection
- Low rectal tumours, FAP
- Permanent stoma
21Resection with stoma
- Hartmans procedure with formation of a stoma
- If present acutely
- If anastomotic healing doubtful
- 50 will be reversed
22Colectomy
- HNPCC
- FAP
- Multiple tumours
23Laparoscopic resection
24Post-operative complications
- Early
- Bleeding
- Infection
- Perforation
- Local structure damage ureters, bladder,
spleen, duodenum - Anastomotic leak or breakdown
- Wound infection
- Wound dehiscence
- Sepsis multiorgan failure
- Stoma problems
- TPN
- Late
- Diarrhoea due to short bowel syndrome
- Impotence pelvic parasympathetic nerve damage
- Small bowel obstruction
- Adhesions
- 2nd radiotherapy
25Staging Dukes Classification
- Dukes A
- Bowel wall only
- No nodes
- No mets
- 75 5 year survival
- Dukes B
- Through muscularis propria
- No nodes
- No mets
- 55 5 year survival
- Dukes C
- C1
- Node positive but only around tumour not distal
- 40 5 year survival
- C2
- Node positive up to proximal resection margin
- 20 5 year survival
- Dukes D
- Distant metastasis
26TNM staging
- T Tumour
- T1 Invasion into submucosa (connective tissue
glands) - T2 Invasion into muscularis propria (muscles
layers) - T3 Invasion into subserosa
- T4 Invasion to local organ or structures /-
visceral peritoneum - N Nodes
- N0 - No lymph node invasion
- N1 spread to 1-3 regional lymph nodes
- N2 - gt4 regional lymph nodes
- M Metastasis
- M0 No mets
- M1 Distant mets
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28Metastasis
- Lymphatic spread to mesenteric then para-aortic
nodes - In the blood to the liver
- Unusually to bone, lung or brain
Absence or presence of liver mets most important
factor in determining prognosis!!!
29Chemotherapy
- 5-Fluorouracil /- Leucovorin
- Following resection of stage 3, /- stage 2
- Metastatic disease
- Radiation may be used in rectal cancer to reduce
the size of the lesion allow preservation of
sphincter
30Follow up
- CEA levels
- Colonoscopy
- CT thorax/abdo/pelvis
31Familial colon cancer
- Hereditary non-polyposis colorectal cancer
(HNPCC) - Lynch syndrome 1 hereditary colon cancer
- Lynch syndrome 2 hereditary colon cancer
increased risk of other GIT or reproductive
tumours - Familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP)
- Unknown mutations
32HNPCC
- DNA mismatch repair gene mutation (several
different chromosome locations) - Autosomal dominant 50 chance of offspring
having mutation - Polyps become malignant over 2-3 years (compared
to 8-10 years for non hereditary colon cancer) - 70-80 lifetime chance of getting colon cancer
- Lynch syndrome 2 increased risk of endometrial,
ovarian, upper urinary tract stomach - Treatment
- Colectomy with ileo-rectal anastomosis
- Colectomy permanent ileostomy
33Amsterdam criteria for HNPCC
- Used to identify people at risk of HNPCC
- gt3 more relatives with HNPCC-related cancer
- 2 successive generations
- At least 1 of the cancers diagnosed lt50 years
- FAP has been excluded
34Familial Adenomatous Polyposis (FAP)
- Rare
- 100 penetrance
- Autosomal dominant
- Deletion on chromosome 5 (adenomatous polyposis
coli gene) - Extra-intestinal features BORED
- Brain tumours
- Osteomas
- Retinal pigment hypertrophy
- Epidermal cysts
- Dentition abnormality
- Treatment
- Panproctocolectomy ileostomy
Good for screening as present in 95 people with
gene
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36Screening
- National screening programme if gt50 years
- Home FOB test send off GP contacted if
positive
37MCQs
- Polyps with the most potential to become
malignant are tubulovillous polyps T or F
38Short cases
- Mr Murphy is a 69 year old man who has noticed
passage of blood with stools over the last week
please take a history. What investigations would
you like to perform?
39Long cases
- Post-operative patient with a stoma
- Ostomy Surgically created opening connecting an
internal organ to the surface of the body - Stoma The opening of the ostomy
- Stoma important for exams
- Ileostomy
- Colostomy
- Ileal-conduit
EXTREMELY COMMON FOR LONG CASES!!!!!!
40Why form a stoma?
- Ileostomy
- To protect a distal at risk anastomosis
- Distal bowel rest for Crohns
- Permanent after panproctocolectomy
- Colostomy
- To protect a distal at risk anastomosis
- Perforation, infection or ischaemia means an
anastomosis would not heal may be performed at
later date - Permanent after abdomino-perineal resection
41Examination of the stoma
- Stoma itself
- Stoma surroundings
- Stoma bag
- 1. Stoma itself
- Where is it?
- How many lumens?
- Type of spout
- Does it look healthy?
- 2. Stoma surroundings
- Skin
- Scars
- Patient general health
- 3. Stoma bag
- What kind of bag?
- Whats in the bag?
42Stoma
- 1. Stoma itself
- Where is it?
- How many lumens?
- Type of spout
- Does it look healthy?
RIF ileostomy, left colostomy but beware
2 may be loop ileostomy (temporary)
Flush with skin colostomy, spouted ileostomy
(or prolapsing colostomy!)
Ischaemic? Prolapsing? Retracted? Stenosed?
43Stoma
- 2. Stoma surroundings
- Skin
- Scars
- Patient general health
Rash, necrosis, parastomal hernia
Previous surgeries, previous stoma sites
Young UC or Crohns, dehydrated looking high
stoma output, cachexic palliative stoma
44Stoma
- 3. Stoma bag
- What kind of bag?
- Whats in the bag?
Tap transparent post-op for output
measurements. Non-transparent no tap long-term
Greenish fluid ileostomy Brownish
colostomy Yellow ileal-conduit Any mucus or
blood?
45Stoma
- Choosing a site
- Stoma nurse
- Important for success of the stoma post-op
- Assess site when sitting, standing
- Avoid
- Previous scars/wound site
- Belt line
- Bony prominence
- Umbilicus
- Skin crease
- Obesity poses problems
46Complications of stoma
- Stoma itself
- Area surrounding stoma
- Living with a stoma
47Complications of stoma
- 1. Stoma itself
- Ischaemia
- Retraction
- Prolapse
- Obstruction
- Stenosis
- 2. Area surrounding stoma
- Leakage
- Hernia
- Skin irritation (ileostomy)
- Fistula (Crohns)
- Living with a stoma
- Increased output/short gut syndrome
(electrolytes, dehydration) - Psychological/psychosexual especially if odour
(charcoal filter helps) - Kidney gall stones (if terminal ileum
diseased/sacrificed)
48- From little things, big things grow
49Reading
- N Engl J Med. 2010 Jan 7362(1)85 author reply
85.Screening for colorectal cancer. Mohammed F. - Lancet. 2009 Mar 7373(9666)790-2.Rectal cancer
optimum treatment leads to optimum results.
Madoff RD.