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  • Title: [Therapeutic strategy in 46 cases of radiation injury of the intestine].
    Author: Joyeux H, Matias J, Gouttebel MC, Vedrenne JB, Guillaume A, Martella L, Saint-Aubert B.
    Journal: Chirurgie; ; 120(12):129-33. PubMed ID: 8746016.
    Abstract:
    Our expérience in the treatment of 46 cases with radiation enteritis (RE) permitted to summarize 5 key points in the Surgical Strategy: laparotomy incision, enterolysis technique, small bowel and colon preservation, anastomosis technic and parenteral nutritional support. Surgery is imposed most of the time in digestive and nutritional Insufficiencies due to radiation enteritis. 46 patients aged to 33-81 years (mean age = 59) were included for possible surgery. The first clinical digestive symptoms were occlusion (n = 39) and/or digestive fistula (n = 7) and/or perforation (n = 3). These abnormalities were often associated with severe malnutrition (weight loss > or = 20% of usual weight) inducing surgery preparation with pre-operative parenteral nutrition (8 to 350 days). 3 patients were not operated because of general problems and lived 1 to 7 months after the beginning of parenteral nutrition. For operated patients (n = 43), 12 underwent 2 operations (resection and/or enteral liberation) and one patient underwent 4 surgical interventions because of digestive fistula. In 35 cases, small bowel resection was performed leaving 135.4 +/- 62.6 cm of intestine (0 to 225 cm of jejunum and/or ileum) and in 13 cases, complete enterolysis was achieved. All the patients received a post-operative parenteral nutrition during 1 to 23 months (median = 6.2 +/- 5.3 months). 31 patients received home parenteral nutrition during the pre and/or post-operative phase for a median duration of 6.3 +/- 3.2 months (range: 1-23 months). 4 patients died during the immediate post-operative phase and among them, 3 died after the second surgery. 12 deaths were observed due to the primary cancer and 6 due to the evolution of radiation lesions. Median survival of patients without cancer evolution reach 180 months with a 5-year survival rate of 94% (Kaplan-Meier method). In patients with radiation enteritis, the pre and post-operative nutritional support associated with radical surgery allows to obtain prolonged survival in non cancer patients.
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