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Colorectal Cancer Rectocele Mr D.Kumar PhD FRCS Consultant Colorectal Surgeon St George’s NHS Trust

Colorectal Cancer Rectocele Mr D.Kumar PhD FRCS Consultant Colorectal Surgeon St George’s NHS Trust

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Page 1: Colorectal Cancer Rectocele Mr D.Kumar PhD FRCS Consultant Colorectal Surgeon St George’s NHS Trust

Colorectal CancerRectocele

Mr D.Kumar PhD FRCS

Consultant Colorectal SurgeonSt George’s NHS Trust

Page 2: Colorectal Cancer Rectocele Mr D.Kumar PhD FRCS Consultant Colorectal Surgeon St George’s NHS Trust

Rectocele

Prolapse of the anterior rectal and posterior vaginal wall into the lumen

of the vagina

Page 3: Colorectal Cancer Rectocele Mr D.Kumar PhD FRCS Consultant Colorectal Surgeon St George’s NHS Trust

RectoceleAnatomy

• Female equivalent of Denonvillier’s fascia - rectovaginal septum

• Separates the rectal(dorsal) compartment

from the urogenital (ventral) compartment• Rectovaginal septum and uterosacral ligaments

provide suspensory support to the perineal body• Further supported by the levator muscles

Page 4: Colorectal Cancer Rectocele Mr D.Kumar PhD FRCS Consultant Colorectal Surgeon St George’s NHS Trust

RectoceleAetiology

• Obstetric trauma – due to alteration in the functional and anatomical position of muscles

• Pathological stretching of pudendal nerves during descent of the foetal head – denervation of the pelvic floor muscles

• Persistent straining at stool

Page 5: Colorectal Cancer Rectocele Mr D.Kumar PhD FRCS Consultant Colorectal Surgeon St George’s NHS Trust

RectoceleClinical presentation

• Constipation (incomplete emptying) –75% of patients

• Vaginal bulge• Sense of rectal pressure• Rectal/low back pain• Bleeding• Dyspareunia• Vaginal digitation/perineal support• Majority totally asymptomatic

Page 6: Colorectal Cancer Rectocele Mr D.Kumar PhD FRCS Consultant Colorectal Surgeon St George’s NHS Trust

RectoceleClassification

• Low

• Middle

• High

Middle and high rectoceles often associated with cystoceles and enteroceles

Page 7: Colorectal Cancer Rectocele Mr D.Kumar PhD FRCS Consultant Colorectal Surgeon St George’s NHS Trust

RectoceleEvaluation

• History

• Examination

• Defaecography Barium

Isotope

• Endoanal U/S

• Pudendal nerve motor latency/manometry

Page 8: Colorectal Cancer Rectocele Mr D.Kumar PhD FRCS Consultant Colorectal Surgeon St George’s NHS Trust
Page 9: Colorectal Cancer Rectocele Mr D.Kumar PhD FRCS Consultant Colorectal Surgeon St George’s NHS Trust

RectoceleManagement

• Conservative

• Operative

Page 10: Colorectal Cancer Rectocele Mr D.Kumar PhD FRCS Consultant Colorectal Surgeon St George’s NHS Trust

RectoceleConservative management

• Bowel training

• Oestrogen replacement therapy – post menopausal

• Vaginal pessary

Page 11: Colorectal Cancer Rectocele Mr D.Kumar PhD FRCS Consultant Colorectal Surgeon St George’s NHS Trust

RectoceleSurgery

• Vaginal - Posterior Colporrhaphy (levatorplasty)

- Defect specific

Page 12: Colorectal Cancer Rectocele Mr D.Kumar PhD FRCS Consultant Colorectal Surgeon St George’s NHS Trust

RectoceleSurgery

• Transanal

Page 13: Colorectal Cancer Rectocele Mr D.Kumar PhD FRCS Consultant Colorectal Surgeon St George’s NHS Trust

ResultsVaginal Arnold et al 1990 – 50% still sympotomatic

Watson et al 1996 – removed the need to digitate in most patients

Murthy et al 1996 – excellent results (strict criteria)

TransanalSullivan et al 1968 – 97.5% success

Shapayak 1985 – 98% improvement

Jarsen’s et al 1994 – 92% success

Mellgren et al 1995 – 88% - complete resolution 52%

Page 14: Colorectal Cancer Rectocele Mr D.Kumar PhD FRCS Consultant Colorectal Surgeon St George’s NHS Trust

RectoceleTransanal

138 patients – symptomatic rectocele

58 had significant rectocele

45 decided to have surgery

• Mean age -57 years • Duration of symptoms -52 months• Median follow-up -24 months

Page 15: Colorectal Cancer Rectocele Mr D.Kumar PhD FRCS Consultant Colorectal Surgeon St George’s NHS Trust

RectoceleFunctional Outcome

Symptom Presurgery Post surgery p*

Straining 40/45 16/45 p< 0.001Incomplete evacuation 40/45 27/45 p< 0.001Vaginal digitation 28/45 6/45 p< 0.001Perineal digitation 22/45 10/45 p= 0.004Incontinence (Grades 3/4) 9/45 7/45 p= 0.688Dyspareunia 11/45 3/45 p= 0.020Vaginal bulging 43/45 10/45 p< 0.001

* McNemar testGrade 1 normal incontinence, 2 incontinent to flatus, 3 incontinent toliquid stool, 4 incontinent to solid stool

Heriot et al 2004

Page 16: Colorectal Cancer Rectocele Mr D.Kumar PhD FRCS Consultant Colorectal Surgeon St George’s NHS Trust

RectoceleAnorectal physiology assessment

Symptom Presurgery Post surgery p**mean (SD) mean (SD)

Resting anal 80(23) 76(29) 0.0370

pressure (cm H20)

Squeeze anal 136(42) 141( 40) 0.911

pressure (cm H20)

Anorectal reflex present 5/17 7/17 0.050*

Threshold volume (cc) 51(23) 41(19) 0.025

Max. volume (cc) 204(87) 201(78) 0.619

** Wilcoxons signed rank test * McNemar test

Heriot et al 2004

Page 17: Colorectal Cancer Rectocele Mr D.Kumar PhD FRCS Consultant Colorectal Surgeon St George’s NHS Trust

RectoceleComparison of PC vs TA

70 patients RCT- 40TA, 30PC• Matched for age, symptoms, % retention• Bowel Sx significantly better in the TA (p<0.01)• Bleeding significantly less in TA (p<0.01) • Analgesic requirement less in TA (p<0.02)• Dyspareunia worse in PC (p<0.001)

(Kahn et al 2001,unpublished)

Page 18: Colorectal Cancer Rectocele Mr D.Kumar PhD FRCS Consultant Colorectal Surgeon St George’s NHS Trust

RectoceleComplications

• Infection

• Bleeding

• Dyspareunia

• Recto –vaginal fistula

Page 19: Colorectal Cancer Rectocele Mr D.Kumar PhD FRCS Consultant Colorectal Surgeon St George’s NHS Trust

Summary

• Rectoceles are common• Only a small % symptomatic• Even a smaller percentage clinically significant• Proper evaluation essential• Patients with a vaginal bulge as the main symptom

should have post. Colporrhaphy• Those with bowel symptoms-transanal repair