Between 1978 and 1984 a consecutive series of 571 patients with colorectal cancer were admitted to the First Department of Surgery of the University of Rome. Patients were divided into a group of 82 patients affected with obstructive cancer and a control group of 489 patients with non-obstructive tumors. In the obstructed group there was a significantly higher incidence of lesions localized in the left colon. Depending on the advancement of lesions a significantly higher incidence of Dukes D tumor, nodal involvement, hepatic metastases and peritoneal dissemination and a significantly lower incidence of Dukes A tumors, were found in the obstructed patients. No significant differences were found in the two groups according to age distribution, duration of symptoms and degree of differentiation of neoplasms. The mortality and morbidity rate were 9.7% and 12.2% respectively in the obstructed patients, and 3.5% and 8.3% respectively in the non-obstructed patients. The rate of complications was greater in the two groups when serum albumin values were under 3 g/l, being 40% vs. 3.3 and 20% vs. 5.2% in obstructed and nonobstructed groups respectively. When Hb levels were under 10 g/l the incidence of complications was 16.7% and 14.4% for the two groups, while when it was higher than 10 mg% the morbidity rate was 8.7% and 6.3% in obstructed and non-obstructed patients respectively. The execution of surgical treatment within 24 hours was related to a morbidity and mortality rate of 50% and 22.2% in obstructed patients, and 40% and 20% in the non-obstructed group.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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