An 85-year-old woman who visited the hospital with sores on the perianal skin was diagnosed with squamous cell carcinoma of the anal canal(cT3N1aM0, cStage ⅢC). She received chemoradiotherapy(radiation total 54 Gy/30 Fr, mitomycin C/capecitabine). The tumor initially shrank, but regrowth of the primary lesion, extensive perianal skin infiltration, and the appearance of para aortic lymph node metastases was observed 6 months later. Laparoscopic abdominoperineal resection was performed to mitigate strong local symptoms. The perineal defect was repaired with bilateral gluteus maximus flap(V- Y flap). The operation prevented anal pain and improved ADL. The patient is currently undergoing chemotherapy 7 months after surgery. We report the case with a review of the literature in which ADL was improved by salvage surgery for tumor regrowth with severe local symptoms and distant metastases after chemoradiotherapy for squamous cell carcinoma of the anal canal.