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Surgical management of primary appendiceal malignancy.

Colorectal Disease 2012 December
AIM: Primary appendiceal neoplasms are rare, with carcinoid being more common than carcinoma. Preoperative diagnosis is infrequent. We report a series of 24 primary appendiceal neoplasms treated over a 5-year period.

METHOD: All primary appendiceal neoplasms diagnosed in a university teaching hospital between April 2003 and June 2008 were identified from the prospective histopathology database. Patient records were reviewed for clinical, operative and pathological data.

RESULTS: Fourteen carcinomas and 10 carcinoids were identified in the 5-year period. The former presented at median age 55.8 years with median symptom duration of 35 days, compared with 48 years and 3 days, respectively, for carcinoids. An abdominal mass was commoner in carcinomas (8/14 vs 1/10). Six patients with carcinoma underwent appendicectomy followed by completion right-hemicolectomy, two of whom had residual disease; seven underwent primary right-hemicolectomy and one had abscess drainage. Five patients with appendiceal carcinoma died of the disease during a median follow-up of 633 (256-1158) days. Six patients underwent appendicectomy for acute appendicitis, one had a primary right-hemicolectomy for a caecal mass. Three had a subsequent right-hemicolectomy for a high-risk carcinoid. An appendiceal carcinoid was an incidental finding in three right-hemicolectomy specimens removed for other indications. No metastases or deaths were recorded at median follow-up 451 (51-975) days.

CONCLUSION: Appendiceal carcinomas follow a more protracted clinical course than carcinoids, which usually present as acute appendicitis. Caution is needed when diagnosing simple appendicitis in older patients with longer symptom duration, particularly if a mass is present. Patients with appendiceal carcinoma should be offered completion right-hemicolectomy. Carcinoma has a poor prognosis.

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