Abstract

BackgroundThe surgical treatment of patients with advanced-stage ovarian cancer is based on maximal cytoreduction with widening the debulking on the extra-ovarian tissues and infiltrated organs. The purpose of the study was to assess the outcome after optimal cytoreduction with partial bowel resection and to find the risk factors of relapse. Another goal was the quantitative and qualitative assessment of intra- and postoperative complications in the studied group.MethodsThe analysis of debulking procedures with intestinal resection and postoperative period in 33 ovarian cancer patients, The International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics (FIGO) stages III and IV, was performed.ResultsThe optimal cytoreduction defined as less than 1.0 cm residual disease was achieved in all patients including the following: 26 patients (78.8 %) with no macroscopic residual disease, 4 patients (12.1 %) with the largest residual tumor less than 0.5, and 3 patients (9.1 %) with 0.5 cm to less than 1.0 cm residual disease. The rectosigmoid resection was the most common surgical procedure (n = 27). The risk of relapse was significantly higher in subjects who had the macroscopic residual tumor left during the primary operation (57.1 vs. 11.5 %, P = 0.035). A primary bowel tumor size was another predictor of relapse. The maximum tumor diameter was significantly larger (14.9 ± 6.7 cm vs. 10.3 ± 4.7 cm, P = 0.047) in patients who developed the relapse.ConclusionsAs presented in the article, our outcomes and other authors’ observations indicate that debulking surgery with bowel resection in patients with advanced ovarian cancer brings good results. Complications connected with bowel surgery are to be accepted. The interesting thing is that a primary bowel tumor size was a predictor of relapse.

Highlights

  • The surgical treatment of patients with advanced-stage ovarian cancer is based on maximal cytoreduction with widening the debulking on the extra-ovarian tissues and infiltrated organs

  • Multi-detector computed tomography (MDCT) or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) with diffusionweighted imaging were performed in all subjects during qualification for optimal cytoreduction to assess the extent of the tumor spread and likelihood of the necessity to perform a bowel resection

  • Patients meeting the exclusion criteria were referred for neoadiuvant chemotherapy (PCL + CBDCA) provided the diagnosis of cancer was confirmed by laparoscopic biopsy or the presence of the neoplastic cells in the peritoneal fluid taken during paracentesis

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Summary

Introduction

The surgical treatment of patients with advanced-stage ovarian cancer is based on maximal cytoreduction with widening the debulking on the extra-ovarian tissues and infiltrated organs. The purpose of the study was to assess the outcome after optimal cytoreduction with partial bowel resection and to find the risk factors of relapse. Another goal was the quantitative and qualitative assessment of intra- and postoperative complications in the studied group. The treatment of patients with advanced-stage ovarian cancer is based on surgery and adjuvant chemotherapy. Numerous studies have shown that the prognosis improves with the reduction of tumor volume at the end of surgery and that the patients in whom the removal of all grossly evident tumor (i.e., “complete” cytoreduction) was possible have the best

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