The No-Touch Isolation Technique of Resection

Abstract
FISHER and I,1in 1955, reported finding cancer cells in the blood of the mesenteric veins that were draining tumors of the colon in eight of 25 patients who were undergoing resection. Subsequently, we studied the portal venous blood of 67 patients undergoing resection for colorectal cancer; we found that malignant cells were found more frequently in the blood of those whose cancer had been manipulated during resection. We recognized that carcinomas of the gastrointestinal tract invade the portal venous radicals and shed cells and that these cells embolize to the liver, where they grow as fatal metastases. Fisher and Fisher2not only demonstrated these cells, but also showed experimentally that the liver metastases were more likely to occur when a certain dose of tumor cells was exceeded. Because of our findings, those of Fisher and Fisher,2and Cole et al,3in 1953, we utilized a