The accurate staging of rectal carcinoma is very important for treatment planning. The histological data obtained from the surgical specimens of 22 patients with rectal carcinoma were compared with pre- and postoperative endorectal US findings and with preoperative CT results. According to an adapted version of the Astler and Coller classification, the different degrees of tumor spread into the rectal wall were represented as follows: stage A: 1 patient; stage B1: 5 patients; stage B2: 6 patients; stage C1: 1 patient; stage C2: 8 patients and stage D: 1 patient. Preoperative staging, based on the overall results of CT and US, was in agreement with histology in 19 of 22 cases. Individual analysis of US and CT results, in comparison with histological data, showed US staging accuracy to be 77.3% (17/22 patients). US accuracy in demonstrating tumor spread into the rectal wall (stages A, B1, C1) was 100% (7/7 patients); US was 70% accurate in lymph node detection (7/10 patients) and 93.3% accurate in demonstrating perirectal infiltration (14/15 patients). CT diagnostic accuracy was 66.7% (10/15 patients) in the evaluation of perirectal lymph nodes, but tumor spread into the rectal wall (stages A and B1) could not be evaluated. While admitting the primary role of US in the staging of rectal carcinoma, according to our results a combination of US and CT yields a more accurate preoperative diagnostic picture.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

rectal carcinoma
16
staging rectal
12
tumor spread
12
spread rectal
12
rectal wall
12
stage patient
12
stage patients
12
patients stage
12
patients
9
histological data
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!