Types of transanal surgery for rectal cancer
The type of surgery you have for rectal cancer depends on the position and size of the tumor. Penn Medicine offers several types of transanal surgery for rectal cancer.
Transanal excision (TAE), also known as local transanal resection, is a rectal cancer surgery procedure typically performed during colonoscopies. TAE is used to remove early-stage, small rectal cancers that are close to the anus. During the procedure, surgeons use special instruments to access the cancer through the anus and cut through the rectal wall’s layers to remove the cancer and some surrounding tissue. The rectal wall’s hole is then closed. TAE is usually performed with local anesthesia, so the patient is not asleep during the surgery.
The transanal endoscopic microsurgery (TEM) procedure is designed for early-stage cancers located too high in the rectum for TAE. Colorectal surgeons use carbon dioxide to first distend the rectum. Then special magnifying scopes and microsurgical tools are used to remove the tumors from the rectum. TEM makes it possible to reach these types of tumors that otherwise are accessible only through invasive, open abdominal surgery.
Transanal total mesorectal excision (TaTME) is used as an alternative to conventional surgery for patients with lower rectal cancer. The procedure removes the tumor, the bowel it was in, and the surrounding tissue and lymph nodes, but without removing the anus, so patients don’t need a permanent colostomy bag.