Association between extent of colonic mucosal sialomucin change and subsequent local recurrence after curative excision of primary colorectal cancer

Abstract
Two interrelated studies were carried out to determine whether extent of sialomucin change adjacent to a primary colorectal carcinoma predicted local tumour invasiveness and risk of local recurrence. In the first, depth of tumour penetration was correlated with the length of the sialomucin band adjacent to 72 primary colorectal cancers. There was a significant (P 3 cm was associated with a 70 per cent probability of adjacent structure (T4) invasion. These observations were then testedprospectively in a second study involving 256 patients to determine whether the presence of a >3 cm sialomucin band could predict local recurrence. Presence of a >3 cm sialomucin band was a significant (X2 = 7.12, d.f. = 1, P < 0.001) and independent predictor of local but not distant recurrence. In addition both the interval to local recurrence and survival were significantly shorter if a >3 cm sialomucin band was present. However the accuracy of > 3 cm sialomucin band as a predictive test for local recurrence was only 70 per cent. The extent of sialomucin adjacent to a primary colorectal cancer does provide a crude assessment of tumour invasiveness and risk of local recurrence.