Abstract

Peritoneal carcinomatosis (ptc) represents advanced malignant disease and has generally been associated with a grim prognosis. Peritoneal surface malignancy is often the major source of morbidity and mortality; it is of major concern in cancer management. Although ptc is categorized as metastatic disease, it represents a special disease pattern considered to be a locoregional disease limited to the abdominal cavity. The combination of cytoreductive surgery (crs) and intraoperative hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (hipec) has successfully been used as locoregional treatment for selected patients with ptc from gastric, colorectal, and ovarian cancer; with mesothelioma; and with pseudomyxoma peritonei. In the prophylactic setting, hipec can also be used to prevent ptc in high-risk patients, and the first results of the "second-look" approach are promising. Patient selection-in which the risks of perioperative morbidity and mortality, which are analogous to those for any other major gastrointestinal surgery, are assessed-is of utmost importance. Those risks have to be weighed against the anticipated survival benefit, which depends mainly on tumour biology, extent of disease, and probability of achieving complete crs. The present review discusses the principles of crs and hipec, the most significant recent clinical data, and current perspectives concerning the application of this treatment modality in various malignancies. Ongoing trials and future directions are noted. It appears that the combination of crs and hipec is an indispensable tool in the oncologist's armamentarium.

Highlights

  • Peritoneal carcinomatosis represents advanced malignant disease and has generally been associated with a grim prognosis

  • The only randomized trial that has been published so far concerning the efficacy of crs and hipec for colorectal ptc reported a median survival of 12.6 months in the systemic chemotherapy arm compared with 22.3 months in the crs and hipec arm (p = 0.032) after a median follow-up of 21.6 months[65]

  • The benefit of crs with hipec remains significant in the era of modern chemotherapy and targeted therapy

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Summary

Introduction

Peritoneal carcinomatosis (ptc) represents advanced malignant disease and has generally been associated with a grim prognosis. Peritoneal surface malignancy is often the major source of morbidity and mortality; it is of major concern in cancer management. Cytoreductive surgery (crs) and intraoperative hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (hipec) have been used as locoregional treatment for selected patients with ptc from gastric, colorectal, and ovarian cancers; with mesothelioma; and with pseudomyxoma peritonei (pmp)[1,2]. The aim of the present review was to use the U.S Library of Medicine’s PubMed database and the ClinicalTrials.gov registry to summarize the most significant recent clinical data and ongoing areas of research into the application of this treatment modality in various malignancies. The rationale and principles of crs and hipec for peritoneal surface malignancies are briefly discussed

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