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Robot-assisted surgery for rectal cancer with solitary sacrococcygeal metastasis after neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy: A case report.

Hiroshi SaitoMasanori KotakeKenichi IshibayashiDaisuke FujimoriKoichiro SawadaDaisuke YamamotoMasahiro OshimaHironori HayashiKaeko OyamaTakuo HaraKeisuke UeharaNoriyuki Inaki
Published in: Asian journal of endoscopic surgery (2023)
An 81-year-old man was referred to our hospital for anal bleeding. Colonoscopy revealed a type 3 tumor at the upper rectum and biopsy showed adenocarcinoma. An enhanced circumferential lesion at the upper rectum and a solitary soft-tissue shadow at the fifth sacral vertebra to the coccyx were detected on abdominal magnetic resonance imaging. Fluorodeoxyglucose uptake was observed at the same sites on positron emission tomography. The patient was diagnosed with rectal cancer with isolated sacrococcygeal metastasis and was treated with neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy followed by robotic surgery. Hartmann's operation was performed in the lithotomy position. The left internal iliac artery and vein were then divided. The internal pudendal artery and vein, the piriformis muscle, and sacrospinous ligament were also divided while preserving the lumbosacral trunk. The scheduled transection line of the sacral surface was fully exposed to prevent massive bleeding during sacrectomy. The dorsal surface of the sacrum was then exposed in the prone position and communicated with the pelvic space. The sacrum was transected at the superior margin of S3 and a specimen was extracted. Pathological findings revealed the infiltration of cancer cells in the sacrococcygeal specimen. The postoperative course was uneventful and the patient was discharged on postoperative day 13.
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