Biomedicines (Jan 2023)

Reappraisal of the Lymphatic Drainage System of the Distal Rectum: Functional Lymphatic Flow into the Presacral Space and Its Clinical Implication in Rectal Cancer Treatment

  • Ri-Na Yoo,
  • Hyeon-Min Cho,
  • Bong-Hyeon Kye,
  • Yoon-Suk Lee,
  • Yi-Suk Kim

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines11020274
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 2
p. 274

Abstract

Read online

Understanding the source and route of pelvic metastasis is essential to developing an optimal strategy for controlling local and systemic diseases of rectal cancer. This study aims to delineate the distribution of lymphatic channels and flow from the distal rectum. In fresh-frozen cadaveric hemipelvis specimens, the ligamentous attachment of the distal rectum to the pelvic floor muscles and the presacral fascia were evaluated. Using indocyanine green (ICG) fluorescence imaging, we simultaneously evaluated the gross anatomy of the lymphatic communication of the distal rectum. We also investigated the lymphatic flow in the pelvic cavity intraoperatively in rectal cancer patients who underwent radical rectal resection with total mesorectal excision (TME). In fresh cadavers, multiple small perforating lymphovascular branches exist in the retrorectal space, posteriorly connecting the mesorectum to the presacral fascia. The lymphatic flow from the distal rectum drains directly into the presacral space through the branches. In patients who underwent TME for rectal cancer, intraoperative ICG fluorescence signals were seen in the pelvic sidewalls and the presacral space. This anatomical study demonstrated that the lymphatic flow from the distal rectum runs directly to the pelvic lateral sidewalls and the presacral space, suggesting a possible route of metastasis in distal rectal cancer.

Keywords