Romanian Journal of Medical Practice (Mar 2020)
The correlation between the extent of left upper abdominal resections and perioperative outcomes in advanced stage and relapsed ovarian cancer
Abstract
The aim of this study is to analyze the feasibility and safety of left upper abdominal resections as part of debulking surgery. Case series presentation. Between January 2015 and August 2019, 32 patients were submitted to left upper abdominal resections. Left upper abdominal resections were performed as part of primary cytoreduction in 22 cases, as part of secondary cytoreduction in eight cases, and respectively as part of tertiary cytoreduction in two cases. The complexity of the resection increased from primary to secondary and tertiary cytoreduction; in the meantime, the rates of postoperative complications also increased with the attempt of cytoreduction. Therefore the postoperative morbidity rate was of 27% at the time of primary cytoreduction, 37.5% at the time of secondary cytoreduction and 50% at the time of tertiary cytoreduction. However, association of left upper abdominal resections leaded to a complete resection rate of 77% at the time of primary cytoreduction, 62.5% at the time of secondary cytoreduction and 50% at the time of tertiary cytoreduction. Conclusions. Left upper abdominal resections might increase the rates of complete debulking in the setting of advanced stage or relapsed ovarian cancer. However the complexity of procedures and the risk of postoperative complications increase with the number of attempts of debulking.
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