Current status of total mesorectal excision and autonomic nerve preservation in rectal cancer

Abstract
Two decades have passed since the late 1970s, which witnessed the introduction of total mesorectal excision (TME)‐based operations for rectal cancers on both sides of the Atlantic. Since the introduction of TME, clinical experience has been reported widely in the form of single‐ and multisurgeon reports from wide geographic regions with multiple participants, and from specialty services with narrow focus and high levels of expertise. All of these published results conclude that in comparison with conventionally practiced blunt surgery for rectal cancer, TME‐based (i.e., anatomically correct, sharply performed) operations are associated with significantly lower rates of pelvic (local) recurrences, a significantly higher rate of survival, and significantly lower long‐term morbidity. The latter is accomplished through dramatically higher rates of sphincter preservation, and the preservation of both sexual and urinary functions. Overall, there is a remarkable similarity in the clinical results that have been reported from diverse centers. TME now forms the basis of large randomized clinical trials in which the role of adjuvant therapy is being reexamined. The current status of TME is reviewed, and the authors’ clinical results of a consecutive series of 544 TME‐based operations performed through 1998 are updated. Semin. Surg. Oncol. 19:321–328, 2000.