Advances in neoadjuvant therapy, imaging, and surgical techniques over the past three decades have significantly transformed the management of low rectal cancer. However, in this anatomically and functionally sensitive region, where decisions intersect with continence, identity, and quality of life, strict adherence to standard protocols is often inadequate. This article explores four recurring dilemmas that influence contemporary surgical decision-making: whether to preserve the sphincter or perform an abdominoperineal resection, whether to create a stoma or avoid it, whether to use minimally invasive techniques or prioritize oncologic clarity, and whether to standardize or personalize care. Drawing from clinical experience and literature, this article argues that oncologic safety must be balanced with functional outcomes and patient acceptability. Sphincter preservation does not always equate to a better quality of life, and stomas, though stigmatized, can offer improved autonomy when framed appropriately. Minimally invasive approaches should be judged by context, expertise, and outcomes, not just technology. Lastly, as metastatic patterns become more complex, personalized care increasingly supersedes algorithmic rigidity. The paper ultimately calls for nuanced, patient-centered strategies that redefine success beyond margins and recurrence toward dignity, function, and survivorship on the patient’s terms.
Souadka et al. (Tue,) studied this question.