Hepatic flexure: The end of the beginning, or the beginning of the end? Why pre-operative localisation remains inconsistent.

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All Authors

Naidu, K.
Kowal, M.
Diamond, J.
Tolan, D.
Tiernan, J.

LTHT Author

Naidu, K
Kowal, Mikolaj
Diamond, Julia
Tolan, Damian
Tiernan, Jim Patrick

LTHT Department

Abdominal Medicine & Surgery
Colorectal Surgery
John Goligher Colorectal Unit
Hepatobiliary Surgery
Radiology

Non Medic

Publication Date

2026

Item Type

Journal Article

Language

Subject

COLORECTAL SURGERY , COLONIC NEOPLASMS , PREOPERATIVE CARE , NEOPLASM METASTASIS

Subject Headings

Abstract

Precision colon cancer surgery increasingly aims to tailor the extent of resection to individual tumour biology and lymphatic drainage, guided by pre-operative assessment. However, at the hepatic flexure (HF), reproducible pre-operative localisation remains challenging because the HF is not a discrete anatomical point but a transition zone. Misclassification at the HF is not merely semantic: given non-trivial intermediate and central nodal metastasis rates in this region, inconsistent localisation may influence assumptions about regional nodal basins and the adequacy of mesenteric excision and lymphadenectomy. We propose mapping the HF as a bounded transition zone defined by two reproducible, pre-operatively appreciable landmarks, rather than an ill-defined 'turn'. This pragmatic framework may better align multidisciplinary planning with true lymphovascular territory and increase the proportion of patients receiving appropriately targeted lymphovascular resection.

Journal

Colorectal Disease