Abstract

Ovarian cancer is the second most common cause of gynecologic cancer death. The most common histologic category of epithelial ovarian cancer is High Grade Serous Ovarian Cancer (HGSOC). The initial management usually involves appropriate staging and debulking surgery. Otherwise, patients with unresectable disease receive neoadjuvant chemotherapy, and then undergo Interval Debulking Surgery (IDS). However, even cases with complete clinical response often experience a recurrence. While the primary debulking surgery is the standard of treatment, the role of secondary debulking surgery for recurrent ovarian cancer is still debatable. The most common sites of recurrences are pelvis and abdomen, whereas recurrence confined solely to lymph node is a rare event. Secondary cytoreductive surgery (SCS) for recurrent ovarian cancer presenting as isolated lymph node metastases has been associated with favorable long-term survival, although the resection of aortic metastatic lymph nodes could be related to severe intraoperative complications. In this article, we report a case of a 72-year-old patient with an isolated lymph-nodal para-aortic recurrence with a history of primary debulking surgery for high grade serous ovarian cancer FIGO stage IV, four years before, followed by received adjuvant chemotherapy, and maintenance therapy. The patient presented with a lymph node relapse down the ileocolic artery and submitted to radical resection of the metastatic lymph nodes.

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