Clinical colorectal cancer

Bowel function 14 years after short pre-surgery radiation and rectal cancer surgery: results from a large randomized trial

Updated

Abstract

Major Low Anterior Resection Syndrome (LARS) was reported by 46% of nonstoma patients who underwent total mesorectal excision (TME) for rectal cancer.

  • Patients who received preoperative short-course radiotherapy (PRT) experienced a higher incidence of major LARS (56%) compared to those who underwent TME alone (35%).
  • The risk of major LARS is significantly increased by PRT (odds ratio 3.0) and being aged 75 years or younger at follow-up (odds ratio 2.4).
  • Factors such as gender, tumor height, anastomotic leakage, type of anastomosis, interval since treatment, and comorbid diabetes were not found to significantly impact the risk of major LARS.
  • Patients suffering from major LARS reported poorer health-related quality of life (HRQL) across multiple domains.

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