Major low anterior resection syndrome has equivalent health-related quality of life implications as having a permanent colostomy
Background The literature is inconclusive when comparing health-related quality of life following restorative anterior resection (AR) compared with abdominoperineal resection (APR). Consideration of functional outcomes may explain this inconsistency. The aim of this study was to compare health-relat...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Techniques in coloproctology 2024-12, Vol.28 (1), p.17, Article 17 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Background
The literature is inconclusive when comparing health-related quality of life following restorative anterior resection (AR) compared with abdominoperineal resection (APR). Consideration of functional outcomes may explain this inconsistency. The aim of this study was to compare health-related quality of life in patients post-anterior resection, stratified by low anterior resection syndrome score, and post-abdominoperineal resection patients.
Methods
A cross-sectional study of consecutive patients post APR and AR for rectal or sigmoid adenocarcinoma at a tertiary centre in Sydney, Australia (Jan 2012- Dec 2021) was performed. HRQoL outcomes (SF36v2 physical [PCS] and mental component summary [MCS] scores) were compared between APR and AR patients, with subgroup analyses stratifying AR patients according to LARS score (no/minor/major). Age- and gender-adjusted comparisons were performed by linear regression.
Results
Overall, 248 post-AR patients (57.3% male, mean age 70.8 years, SD 11.6) and 64 post-APR patients (62.5% male, mean age 68.1 years, SD 13.1) participated. When stratified by LARS, ‘major LARS’ had a similar negative effect on age-and sex-adjusted PCS scores as APR. ‘No LARS’ (
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ISSN: | 1123-6337 1128-045X 1128-045X |
DOI: | 10.1007/s10151-023-02879-y |