Colorectal Cancer
Copyright ©2005 Baishideng Publishing Group Co., Limited. All rights reserved.
World J Gastroenterol. Jan 21, 2005; 11(3): 315-318
Published online Jan 21, 2005. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v11.i3.315
Colorectal cancer in geriatric patients: Endoscopic diagnosis and surgical treatment
Andreas Kirchgatterer, Pius Steiner, Dietmar Hubner, Eva Fritz, Gerhard Aschl, Josef Preisinger, Maximilian Hinterreiter, Bernhard Stadler, Peter Knoflach
Andreas Kirchgatterer, Pius Steiner, Dietmar Hubner, Eva Fritz, Gerhard Aschl, Maximilian Hinterreiter, Bernhard Stadler, Peter Knoflach, First Department of Medicine/Gastroenterology, General Hospital Wels, Wels, Austria
Josef Preisinger, Second Department of Surgery, General Hospital Wels, Wels, Austria
Author contributions: All authors contributed equally to the work.
Correspondence to: Dr. Andreas Kirchgatterer, First Department of Medicine/Gastroenterology, General Hospital Wels, A-4600 Wels/Austria, Grieskirchnerstrasse 42, Austria. andreas. kirchgatterer@klinikum-wels.at
Telephone: +43-7242-415-2181 Fax: +43-7242-415-3986
Received: February 2, 2004
Revised: February 8, 2004
Accepted: April 7, 2004
Published online: January 21, 2005
Abstract

AIM: To investigate the prevalence of colorectal cancer in geriatric patients undergoing endoscopy and to analyze their outcome.

METHODS: All consecutive patients older than 80 years who underwent lower gastrointestinal endoscopy between January 1995 and December 2002 at our institution were included. Patients with endoscopic diagnosis of colorectal cancer were evaluated with respect to indication, localization and stage of cancer, therapeutic consequences, and survival.

RESULTS: Colorectal cancer was diagnosed in 88 patients (6% of all endoscopies, 55 women and 33 men, mean age 85.2 years). Frequent indications were lower gastrointestinal bleeding (25%), anemia (24%) or sonographic suspicion of tumor (10%). Localization of cancer was predominantly the sigmoid colon (27%), the rectum (26%), and the ascending colon (20%). Stage Dukes A was rare (1%), but Dukes D was diagnosed in 22% of cases. Curative surgery was performed in 54 patients (61.4%), in the remaining 34 patients (38.6%) surgical treatment was not feasible due to malnutrition and asthenia or cardiopulmonary comorbidity (15 patients), distant metastases (11 patients) or refusal of operation (8 patients). Patients undergoing surgery had a very low in-hospital mortality rate (2%). Operated patients had a one-year and three-year survival rate of 88% and 49%, and the survival rates for non-operated patients amounted to 46% and 13% respectively.

CONCLUSION: Nearly two-thirds of 88 geriatric patients with endoscopic diagnosis of colorectal cancer underwent successful surgery at a very low perioperative mortality rate, resulting in significantly higher survival rates. Hence, the clinical relevance of lower gastrointestinal endoscopy and oncologic surgery in geriatric patients is demonstrated.

Keywords: Colorectal cancer; Endoscopic diagnosis; Surgical treatment