» Articles » PMID: 9381339

Perioperative Tumor Localization for Laparoscopic Colorectal Surgery

Overview
Journal Surg Endosc
Publisher Springer
Date 1997 Oct 8
PMID 9381339
Citations 46
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Background: Because of the inability to palpate colonic tumors during laparoscopy, their location must be precisely identified before resection is undertaken.

Method: A retrospective study was performed of 58 patients in order to be able to describe our methods of tumor localization for laparoscopic colorectal operations and to review their effectiveness.

Results: In all patients, the entire colon was examined preoperatively by colonoscopy. In one patient, preoperative colonoscopic localization was inaccurate. In 31 patients, tumors were easily detectable at surgery. In five patients with the tumor in the right colon, even though the lesion was not detectable at surgery, right colectomy was performed without marking because preoperative colonoscopy reliably identified the lesion adjacent to the ileocecal valve. Twenty-two patients required some type of procedure to localize the tumor. The procedures and their problems were as follows: preoperative tattoo (five)--tattoo not visualized (one); intraoperative colonoscopy alone (six), combined with intraoperative tattoo (four) or clip (three)--poor operative exposure due to bowel distension (nine), hard to see the clip (three), dislodged clip (two), inadequate resection margin (one); intraoperative proctoscopy alone (two), combined with laparoscopic stitch (two)--no problems. In no patient was tumor present at a resection line and in no patient was the wrong segment resected.

Conclusions: Reliable preoperative identification of the tumor adjacent to the ileocecal valve can permit right colectomy without marking. Lesions in the upper rectum can be approached via intraoperative proctoscopy +/- suture placement. If the surgeon anticipates intraoperative localization may be difficult, lesions other than rectal or cecal ones should probably be marked by preoperative tattooing. Further studies regarding the technique of tattooing are warranted.

Citing Articles

Preoperative tumor marking with indocyanine green (ICG) prior to minimally invasive colorectal cancer: a systematic review of current literature.

Konstantinidis M, Ioannidis A, Vassiliu P, Arkadopoulos N, Papanikolaou I, Stavridis K Front Surg. 2023; 10:1258343.

PMID: 37638121 PMC: 10453801. DOI: 10.3389/fsurg.2023.1258343.


Assessment of Autologous Blood marker localIzation and intraoperative coLonoscopy localIzation in laparoscopic colorecTal cancer surgery (ABILITY): a randomized controlled trial.

Zhang K, Li J, Zhang H, Hu R, Cui X, Du T BMC Cancer. 2023; 23(1):204.

PMID: 36869328 PMC: 9985272. DOI: 10.1186/s12885-023-10669-w.


Preoperative tumor marking with indocyanine green prior of robotic colorectal resections.

Konstantinidis M, Ioannidis A, Vasiliou P, Arkadopoulos N, Papanikolaou I, Chand M Front Surg. 2023; 9:1087889.

PMID: 36620381 PMC: 9815600. DOI: 10.3389/fsurg.2022.1087889.


Preoperative Colonoscopic Tattooing with Autologous Blood in Laparoscopic Colorectal Cancer Surgery: Red-Flagging for an Invisible Enemy.

Lee J, Oh H J Minim Invasive Surg. 2022; 23(3):110-111.

PMID: 35602383 PMC: 8985643. DOI: 10.7602/jmis.2020.23.3.110.


The Usefulness of Preoperative Colonoscopic Tattooing with Autologous Blood for Localization in Laparoscopic Colorectal Surgery.

Yeo U, Sung N, Roh S, Choi W, Song K, Choi I J Minim Invasive Surg. 2022; 23(3):114-119.

PMID: 35602381 PMC: 8985630. DOI: 10.7602/jmis.2020.23.3.114.