## Correct Answer: A. Adenocarcinoma is a rare variant of rectal carcinoma This statement is FALSE because **adenocarcinoma is NOT rare in rectal carcinoma—it is the MOST COMMON histological type**, accounting for 90–95% of all colorectal cancers in India and globally. The confusion arises because students may conflate "rare" with other histological variants like mucinous adenocarcinoma, signet-ring cell carcinoma, or neuroendocrine tumours, which ARE genuinely rare. However, the straightforward adenocarcinoma (intestinal type) is the predominant form. This is a critical distinction in Indian surgical practice, where colorectal cancer incidence is rising, and adenocarcinoma remains the standard histology encountered in screening and surveillance programmes. The question tests whether students understand the epidemiology of rectal malignancy—a high-yield concept for NEET PG surgery. Adenocarcinoma's prevalence is so high that when a rectal mass is encountered, adenocarcinoma is the default assumption until proven otherwise. ## Why the other options are wrong **B. Early morning spurious diarrhoea and tenesmus can occur** — This is TRUE and is a classic clinical presentation of rectal carcinoma. Spurious diarrhoea (frequent passage of small-volume stools with mucus and blood) and tenesmus (painful straining) are hallmark symptoms of left-sided colonic and rectal tumours. These occur because the tumour irritates the rectal mucosa and narrows the lumen, triggering frequent defecation. This is a high-yield clinical sign taught in all Indian surgical textbooks and is commonly tested in NEET PG. **C. Growth confined to the rectal mucosa is stage A of modified Duke's staging** — This is TRUE. Modified Duke's staging (Astler-Coller) classifies Stage A as tumour confined to the mucosa and submucosa without lymph node involvement. This is the earliest stage with the best prognosis (>90% 5-year survival). Stage B involves muscularis propria and beyond, Stage C includes lymph node metastasis, and Stage D represents distant metastasis. This staging system is fundamental to rectal cancer management in Indian practice. **D. Hartmann's operation is done in elderly debilitated patients** — This is TRUE. Hartmann's procedure (colostomy with closure of distal bowel) is a palliative or temporary surgical option for rectal cancer in elderly, frail, or medically unfit patients who cannot tolerate major resection. It is also used in emergency settings (perforation, obstruction). In India, where many patients present late with advanced disease and comorbidities, Hartmann's remains a practical option in high-risk surgical candidates. This is standard surgical teaching. ## High-Yield Facts - **Adenocarcinoma accounts for 90–95% of rectal cancers**—it is the most common, not rare, histological type. - **Spurious diarrhoea and tenesmus** are classic early symptoms of rectal carcinoma due to mucosal irritation and luminal narrowing. - **Modified Duke's Stage A** = tumour confined to mucosa/submucosa with no lymph node involvement; 5-year survival >90%. - **Hartmann's operation** (end colostomy + closure of distal rectum) is used in elderly, debilitated, or emergency rectal cancer cases. - **Rare rectal cancer histologies** include mucinous adenocarcinoma, signet-ring cell, neuroendocrine, and squamous cell carcinomas. ## Mnemonics **Rectal Cancer Presentations (STEM)** **S**purious diarrhoea, **T**enesmus, **E**arly morning symptoms, **M**ucus/blood in stool. Use this to recall the classic triad of left-sided colonic/rectal tumour symptoms. **Duke's Staging (A-B-C-D)** **A** = mucosa only (best prognosis), **B** = muscularis/beyond (no nodes), **C** = lymph nodes involved, **D** = distant metastasis (worst). Helps rank prognosis and treatment intensity. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs "adenocarcinoma" with "rare" to exploit students who confuse adenocarcinoma with genuinely rare variants (mucinous, signet-ring, neuroendocrine). The trap is semantic: adenocarcinoma is common; only its subtypes are rare. Students who memorize "rare variants" without distinguishing the common intestinal-type adenocarcinoma fall into this trap. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian tertiary centres, adenocarcinoma of the rectum is so prevalent that screening programmes (faecal occult blood, colonoscopy) are designed around its detection. A patient presenting with spurious diarrhoea and tenesmus should trigger immediate colonoscopy; adenocarcinoma is the working diagnosis until histology confirms otherwise. Late presentation (Stage C–D) is common in India due to delayed diagnosis, making early recognition of symptoms critical. _Reference: Bailey & Love Ch. 70 (Colorectal Cancer); Robbins Ch. 17 (GI Pathology); OP Ghai Ch. 12 (Rectal Malignancy)_
Sign up free to access AI-powered MCQ practice with detailed explanations and adaptive learning.