[Preoperative anal function assessment in sphincter-preserving surgery for rectal cancer: clinical significance and strategies].

Journal: Zhonghua wei chang wai ke za zhi = Chinese journal of gastrointestinal surgery
Published Date:

Abstract

Sphincter-preserving surgery has become the mainstream approach for mid-to-low rectal cancer, yet postoperative anal dysfunction (low anterior resection syndrome, LARS) occurs in 30%-50% of patients, significantly impacting quality of life. This review systematically elaborates the clinical value of preoperative anal function assessment (mainly digital rectal examination), proposing a multidimensional evaluation system integrating anatomical (including high-resolution anorectal MRI, 3D transrectal ultrasound and dynamic contrast-enhanced ultrasound), physiological (anorectal amnometry and anal electromyography), and neurological assessments (including Parks scale, Wexner score, MSK-BFI scale and LARS score), alongside innovative strategies such as artificial intelligence and gut microbiome analysis. We advocate incorporating preoperative functional assessment into quality control standards for sphincter preservation, promoting a paradigm shift from "anatomical preservation" to "functional preservation".

Authors

  • F Liu
    Department of Radiology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard University, Boston, MA, USA. Electronic address: fliu12@mgh.harvard.edu.
  • Y J Ye
    Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Laboratory of Surgical Oncology, Beijing Key Laboratory of Colorectal Cancer Diagnosis and Treatment Research, Peking University People's Hospital, Beijing 100044, China.