Colorectal Surgery Review

Presacral Tumors


Listen Later

The Deep Dive: Presacral Tumors – The Deep Dive on Anatomy, Nerve Preservation, & Oncologic Strategy

This episode tackles the incredibly rare but complex topic of presacral tumors. Though they are rarely encountered, maybe appearing in only one in 40,000 hospital admissions, they present high stakes due to their location near critical nerves and vessels, requiring a solid, almost academic understanding for effective management.

What We Cover:

  • Anatomic Foundation & Function: We break down the boundaries of the presacral space and stress the critical importance of the sacral nerve roots (S2 through S5). Learn the fundamental findings from the Todd study that quantify the functional cost of nerve removal: understanding that preserving S2 and S3, or S4 bilaterally, is the difference between continence and a permanent diversion (ostomy). We also review the "rule of thumb" that resecting more than half of the S1 vertebral body compromises pelvic stability, requiring specialized sacropelvic reconstruction.

  • Diagnosis and Clinical Clues: Presacral tumors are often diagnosed late, frequently after being misdiagnosed as recurring perianal abscesses or fistulas (sometimes requiring an average of 4.1 prior operations). We detail the classic positional pain (worse when sitting, better when standing) that should raise suspicion, and review the non-negotiable elements of the physical exam, including the digital rectal exam (DRE), which almost always reveals an extrinsic mass pushing the rectum forward.

  • Imaging Gold Standard and the Biopsy Debate: Discover why MRI is the gold standard for these lesions, offering unmatched contrast resolution for evaluating nerve root and dural sac compression. Learn about the need for specific, obliquely oriented T2-weighted sequences aligned along the sacrum's long axis to accurately assess nerve involvement. We dissect the critical decision of pre-operative biopsy: the core principle is only to biopsy if the result will change management. Crucially, we outline the absolute contraindications, including avoiding transrectal, transvaginal, and transparitoneal approaches due to the severe risk of tumor seeding and converting a function-sparing operation into a more morbid one.

  • Pathology and Malignancy: We review the diverse pathology (up to 50% have malignant potential), including congenital cysts (dermoids, tailgut cysts), the totipotent threat of teratomomas, and the most common primary malignancy: Chordoma. We emphasize that wide, negative surgical margins (R0 resection) are the only potentially curative treatment for these locally aggressive tumors.

  • Surgical Strategy: We discuss the necessity of the Multi-Disciplinary Team (MDT), involving colorectal surgery, orthopedic oncology, neurosurgery, and plastics, for optimal outcomes. The surgical goal is dictated by pathology: function-sparing for benign lesions versus an oncologic R0 resection for malignant disease, even if function must be sacrificed. We detail surgical approaches based on the S3/S4 landmark (posterior, anterior, or combined), and outline essential technical maneuvers, such as protective barriers during posterior osteotomy and meticulous dural closure for high resections.

  • Outcomes and Surveillance: Finally, we cover rigorous surveillance protocols for both benign and malignant resections, and explore the growing role of conservative observation for selected, small, asymptomatic lesions—highlighting the current knowledge gap regarding long-term safety. Experience matters here, and initial mismanagement can jeopardize curability.

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Colorectal Surgery ReviewBy Allen Kamrava, MD MBA FACS FASCRS