Surgical treatment of intestinal radiation injury

A review of 43 consecutive patients requiring operation for serious intestinal radiation injury was undertaken to elucidate the efficacy of surgical treatment. The most common site of radiation injury was the rectum (19 cases), followed by the small bowel (13 cases), the colon (7 cases), and the combination of these (4 cases). The overall operative mortality was 14%; morbidity, 47%; and the postoperative symptom‐free period, 18 ± 30 months. Colostomy (N = 20) carried the lowest risk of mortality, 0%, as compared with resection (N = 17) and bypass procedure (N = 6), which were accompanied by the mortalities of 24% and 33%, respectively. During the follow‐up (3–13 years) 12 patients (28%) died or recurrent cancer and 9 patients (21%) of persistent radiation injury, which yielded an overall mortality of 65% after resection and 50% and 65% after bypass and colostomy procedures, respectively. Continuing radiation damage led to 15 late reoperations. Ten of these were performed after colostomy, four after resection, and one after bypass. We conclude that colostomy cannot be regarded as a preferred operative method, because it does not prevent the progression of radiation injury and because it is, for this reason, associated with a higher late‐complication‐rate. A more radical surgery is recommended but with the limitation that the operative method must be adapted to the operative finding.

[1]  H. Thomson,et al.  Surgical Aspects of Intestinal Injury Due to Pelvic Radiotherapy , 1985, Annals of surgery.

[2]  N. Green,et al.  Severe rectal injury following radiation for prostatic cancer. , 1984, The Journal of urology.

[3]  G. Marks,et al.  The surgical management of the radiation-injured intestine. , 1983, The Surgical clinics of North America.

[4]  V. Fazio,et al.  Radiation Injury of the Rectum: Evaluation of Surgical Treatment , 1981, Annals of surgery.

[5]  M. Deitel,et al.  Major intestinal complications of radiotherapy. , 1979, The American journal of gastroenterology.

[6]  J. Welch,et al.  Operative management of radiation injuries of the intestinal tract. , 1979, American journal of surgery.

[7]  J. Spencer,et al.  Surgical aspects of radiation injury to the intestine , 1979, The British journal of surgery.

[8]  J. Balint,et al.  Effects of abdominal surgery on the development of radiation enteropathy. , 1977, Gastroenterology.

[9]  N. Pearlman,et al.  Surgical management of complications of radiation-injured gut. , 1977, American journal of surgery.

[10]  Trelford Jd,et al.  Complications following operation in the previously irradiated abdominopelvic cavity. , 1977 .

[11]  K. Kiviniitty,et al.  The incidence and treatment of intestinal and urological complications after combined radiotherapy for uterine carcinomas. , 1976, Strahlentherapie.

[12]  F. Lewis,et al.  Surgical management of radiation injury of the small and large intestine , 1976, Diseases of the colon and rectum.

[13]  S. Hellman,et al.  Normal tissue responses to radiation therapy. , 1975, The New England journal of medicine.

[14]  J. Parker,et al.  Small bowel injury following radiation therapy for cervical cancer , 1974 .

[15]  R. Rhodes,et al.  The Natural History and Management of Radiation Induced Injury of the Gastrointestinal Tract , 1969, Annals of surgery.

[16]  P. Strickland Damage to the rectum in the radium treatment of carcinoma of the cervix. , 1954, The British journal of radiology.