Abstract

Six patients with epithelial ovarian cancer underwent splenectomy as part of their extensive primary cytoreductive surgical management at the Johannesburg University Hospital. These patients represented 7.6% (6 of 79) of advanced-disease patients (stages III and IV) followed during the study period. Five splenectomies were performed because of metastatic disease confirmed on microscopy. One of these showed parenchymal involvement and represented only the third case in the world literature. The remaining patient required splenectomy for capsular avulsion injury and resultant bleeding. Late thrombotic complications occurred in 4 of 6 (67%) patients, resulting in death of one patient from massive pulmonary embolism 20 days after surgery. Three patients (50%) currently have no evidence of disease 14, 25, and 32 months after surgery. The remaining 2 patients died of recurrent disease 19 and 58 months following primary operation. This, the largest reported series in the English literature, indicates that splenectomy, albeit potentially hazardous, is justified when it permits optimal cytoreductive surgery.

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