AI Article Synopsis

  • - This study investigated how changes in the elasticity of the internal anal sphincter relate to anorectal function in patients with rectal cancer who underwent chemoradiotherapy.
  • - Researchers used a technique called real-time tissue elastography with transanal ultrasonography to measure sphincter hardness before and after treatment in 27 patients, finding that 59.3% experienced a decrease in elasticity.
  • - Results showed that those with decreased elasticity had significantly higher maximum resting pressure and worse Wexner scores, suggesting that internal anal sphincter sclerosis from chemoradiotherapy may contribute to anorectal dysfunction.

Article Abstract

Purpose: This study aimed to clarify the relationship between changes in elasticity and anorectal function before and after chemoradiotherapy.

Methods: This is a single-center prospective cohort study (Department of Surgical Oncology, The University of Tokyo). We established a technique to quantify internal anal sphincter hardness as elasticity using transanal ultrasonography with real-time tissue elastography. Twenty-seven patients with post-chemoradiotherapy rectal cancer during 2019-2022 were included. Real-time tissue elastography with transanal ultrasonography was performed before and after chemoradiotherapy to measure internal anal sphincter hardness as "elasticity" (hardest (0) to softest (255); decreased elasticity indicated sclerotic changes). The relationship between the increase or decrease in elasticity pre- and post-chemoradiotherapy and the maximum resting pressure, maximum squeeze pressure, and Wexner score were the outcome measures.

Results: A decrease in elasticity was observed in 16/27 (59.3%) patients after chemoradiotherapy. Patients with and without elasticity decrease after chemoradiotherapy comprised the internal anal sphincter sclerosis and non-sclerosis groups, respectively. The maximum resting pressure post-chemoradiotherapy was significantly high in the internal anal sphincter sclerosis group (63.0 mmHg vs. 47.0 mmHg), and a majority had a worsening Wexner score (60.0% vs. 18.2%) compared with that of the non-sclerosis group. Decreasing elasticity (internal anal sphincter sclerosis) correlated with a higher maximum resting pressure (r = 0.36); no correlation was observed between the degree of elasticity change and maximum squeeze pressure.

Conclusion: Internal anal sphincter sclerosis due to chemoradiotherapy may correlate to anorectal dysfunction.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11045657PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00384-024-04633-8DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

internal anal
24
anal sphincter
24
sphincter sclerosis
16
real-time tissue
12
tissue elastography
12
maximum resting
12
resting pressure
12
anorectal function
8
elasticity
8
sphincter hardness
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!