
HIGH-RESOLUTION ANORECTAL MANOMETRY IN TESTING ANORECTAL FUNCTION AFTER COMBINATION TREATMENT FOR RECTAL CANCER
Author(s) -
Oleg I. Kit,
Yuriy А. Gevorkyan,
Natalya V. Soldatkina,
Yevgeniy Kolesnikov,
Michail Averkin,
Marina А. Gusareva,
Dmitry A. Kharagezov,
Andrey V. Dashkov,
E. A. Mirzoyan
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
voprosy onkologii
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.108
H-Index - 11
eISSN - 2949-4915
pISSN - 0507-3758
DOI - 10.37469/0507-3758-2020-66-4-385-390
Subject(s) - medicine , anorectal manometry , radiation therapy , sphincter , internal anal sphincter , colorectal cancer , anal cancer , anal sphincter , anal canal , cancer , surgery , urology , rectum , gastroenterology , defecation
The purpose of the study was to evaluate anorectal function with high-resolution anorectal manometry in patients receiving combination treatment for rectal cancer. Material and methods. We analyzed literature data (PubMed, Scopus, eLIBRARY databases) and our treatment outcomes in 50 rectal cancer patients receiving combination or surgical treatment at Rostov Research Institute of Oncology. Results. The mean anal resting pressure was 1.8 times lower, and the maximal anal squeeze pressure was 1.5 times lower in patients after combination treatment, compared to surgical treatment (p<0.05). 3 months after combination treatment with prolonged radiotherapy, contractile properties of the internal sphincter were decreased in 83.3%, of the external sphincter - in 26.7% of patients. Fatigue rate of external sphincter muscles was increased in 17 (56.7%) patients of this group. We observed a correlation between some anorectal manometry data and the LARS score: in both groups, patients with the maximal LARS score showed the lowest mean anal resting pressure, compared to patients with minimal and average LaRs scores (p<0.05). Conclusion. Due to negative effect of radiation therapy on the anorectal function, careful selection of patients who will benefit from radiation therapy is very important, as well as identification of patients with a high risk of radiation-induced functional problems and development of rehabilitation programs for patients treated for rectal cancer.