Surgical treatment of advanced ovarian cancer.

2013 
BACKGROUND: The classical treatment for advanced ovarian cancer (OC) consists of a optimal cytoreductive surgery (when the postoperative residual tumor is under 1 cm.), followed by adjuvant chemotherapy based on platinum or paclitaxel derivatives. The 5-year survival rate in case of advanced OC with secondary peritoneal carcinomatosis (PC) is below 25%. The treatment of PC (interpreted as a local-regional disease and not as a systemic disease) is based on an aggressive surgical act (a full or maximal cytoreduction without residual tumor), followed by local chemotherapy or hypertermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy. This is a retrospective study which reassesses the surgical treatment of advanced OC within the period January 2004 - December 2010 in the Center of General Surgery and Liver Transplantation within Fundeni Institute. METHODS: In the period January 2004 - December 2010 in the Center of General Surgery and Liver Transplantation within Fundeni Institute were operated 405 patients with advanced ovarian cancer. In 105 patients (25.9%) intraperitoneal chemotherapy with Cisplatin was performed. RESULTS: Overal survival was calculated for a subsample of 297 patients, for whom it was possible to properly ensure the follow-up, being of 43 months in the patients with intraperitoneal chemotherapy (p = 0.02) and 37 months in the patients without intraperitoneal chemotherapy. CONCLUSIONS: The maximal cytoreduction associating IPCH is an aggressive multidisciplinary therapeutic approach in advanced OC, reserved for difficult cases, considered in the past without solution. In properly selected cases, this shows a clear increase in survival rate.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    0
    References
    1
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []