AIM: To investigate the clinical impact of post-hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy(HIPEC) leukopenia, intraperitoneal and combined intravenous/intraperitoneal drug administrations were compared.METHODS: Two pat...AIM: To investigate the clinical impact of post-hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy(HIPEC) leukopenia, intraperitoneal and combined intravenous/intraperitoneal drug administrations were compared.METHODS: Two patient cohorts were retrospectively analyzed regarding the incidence of postoperative leukopenia. The first cohort(n = 32) received Mitomycin C(MMC)-based HIPEC intraperitoneally(35 mg/m2 for 90 min) and the second cohort(n = 10) received a bidirectional therapy consisting of oxaliplatin(OX)(300 mg/m2 for 30 min) intraperitoneally and 5-fluorouracil(5-FU) 400 mg/m2 plus folinic acid 20 mg/m2 intravenously. The following data were collected retrospectively: Age, sex, length of operation, length of hospital stay, amount of resection including extent of peritonectomy, peritoneal cancer index, CC(completeness of cytoreduction)-status and leukocyte-count before cytoreductive surgery(CRS) and HIPEC, on days 3, 7 and 14 after CRS and HIPEC. HIPEC leukopenia was defined as < 4000 cells/m3. RESULTS: Leukopenia occurred statistically more often in the MMC than in the OX/5-FU-group(10/32 vs 0/10; P = 0.042). Leukopenia set-on was on day 7 after CRS and MMC-HIPEC and lasted for two to three days. Three patients(33%) required medical treatment. Patients affected by leukopenia were predominantly female(7/10 patients) and older than 50 years(8/10 patients). Thelength of hospital stay tended to be higher in the MMCgroup without reaching statistical significance(22.5± 11 vs 16.5 ± 3.5 d). Length of operation(08:54 ± 01:44 vs 09:48 ± 02:28 h) were comparable between patients with and without postoperative leukopenia. Prior history of systemic chemotherapy did not trigger postHIPEC leukopenia. Occurrence of leucopenia did not trigger surgical site infections, intraabdominal abscess formations, hospital-acquired pneumonia or anastomotic insufficiencies. CONCLUSION: Surgeons must be aware that there is a higher incidence of postoperative leukopenia in MMCbased HIPEC protocols primarily affecting females and older patients.展开更多
BACKGROUND Multivisceral resections (MVR) are often necessary to reach clear resections margins but are associated with relevant morbidity and mortality. Factors associated with favorable oncologic outcomes and elevat...BACKGROUND Multivisceral resections (MVR) are often necessary to reach clear resections margins but are associated with relevant morbidity and mortality. Factors associated with favorable oncologic outcomes and elevated morbidity rates are not clearly defined. AIM To systematically review the literature on oncologic long-term outcomes and morbidity and mortality in cancer surgery a systematic review of the literature was performed. METHODS PubMed was searched for relevant articles (published from 2000 to 2018). Retrieved abstracts were independently screened for relevance and data were extracted from selected studies by two researchers. RESULTS Included were 37 studies with 3112 patients receiving MVR for colorectal cancer (1095 for colon cancer, 1357 for rectal cancer, and in 660 patients origin was not specified). The most common resected organs were the small intestine, bladder and reproductive organs. Median postoperative morbidity rate was 37.9%(range: 7% to 76.6%) and median postoperative mortality rate was 1.3%(range: 0% to 10%). The median conversion rate for laparoscopic MVR was 7.9%(range: 4.5% to 33%). The median blood loss was lower after laparoscopic MVR compared to the open approach (60 mL vs 638 mL). Lymph-node harvest after laparoscopic MVR was comparable. Report on survival rates was heterogeneous, but the 5-year overall-survival rate ranged from 36.7% to 90%, being worst in recurrent rectalcancer patients with a median 5-year overall survival of 23%. R0 -resection, primary disease setting and no lymph-node or lymphovascular involvement were the strongest predictors for long-term survival. The presence of true malignant adhesions was not exclusively associated with poorer prognosis. Included were 16 studies with 1.600 patients receiving MVR for gastric cancer. The rate of morbidity ranged from 11.8% to 59.8%, and the main postoperative complications were pancreatic fistulas and pancreatitis, anastomotic leakage, cardiopulmonary events and post-operative bleedings. Total mortality was between 0% and 13.6% with an R0 -resection achieved in 38.4% to 100% of patients. Patients after R0 resection had 5-year overall survival rates of 24.1% to 37.8%. CONCLUSION MVR provides, in a selected subset of patients, the possibility for good long-term results with acceptable morbidity rates. Unlikelihood of achieving R0 -status, lymphovascular- and lymph -node involvement, recurrent disease setting and the presence of metastatic disease should be regarded as relative contraindications for MVR.展开更多
文摘AIM: To investigate the clinical impact of post-hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy(HIPEC) leukopenia, intraperitoneal and combined intravenous/intraperitoneal drug administrations were compared.METHODS: Two patient cohorts were retrospectively analyzed regarding the incidence of postoperative leukopenia. The first cohort(n = 32) received Mitomycin C(MMC)-based HIPEC intraperitoneally(35 mg/m2 for 90 min) and the second cohort(n = 10) received a bidirectional therapy consisting of oxaliplatin(OX)(300 mg/m2 for 30 min) intraperitoneally and 5-fluorouracil(5-FU) 400 mg/m2 plus folinic acid 20 mg/m2 intravenously. The following data were collected retrospectively: Age, sex, length of operation, length of hospital stay, amount of resection including extent of peritonectomy, peritoneal cancer index, CC(completeness of cytoreduction)-status and leukocyte-count before cytoreductive surgery(CRS) and HIPEC, on days 3, 7 and 14 after CRS and HIPEC. HIPEC leukopenia was defined as < 4000 cells/m3. RESULTS: Leukopenia occurred statistically more often in the MMC than in the OX/5-FU-group(10/32 vs 0/10; P = 0.042). Leukopenia set-on was on day 7 after CRS and MMC-HIPEC and lasted for two to three days. Three patients(33%) required medical treatment. Patients affected by leukopenia were predominantly female(7/10 patients) and older than 50 years(8/10 patients). Thelength of hospital stay tended to be higher in the MMCgroup without reaching statistical significance(22.5± 11 vs 16.5 ± 3.5 d). Length of operation(08:54 ± 01:44 vs 09:48 ± 02:28 h) were comparable between patients with and without postoperative leukopenia. Prior history of systemic chemotherapy did not trigger postHIPEC leukopenia. Occurrence of leucopenia did not trigger surgical site infections, intraabdominal abscess formations, hospital-acquired pneumonia or anastomotic insufficiencies. CONCLUSION: Surgeons must be aware that there is a higher incidence of postoperative leukopenia in MMCbased HIPEC protocols primarily affecting females and older patients.
文摘BACKGROUND Multivisceral resections (MVR) are often necessary to reach clear resections margins but are associated with relevant morbidity and mortality. Factors associated with favorable oncologic outcomes and elevated morbidity rates are not clearly defined. AIM To systematically review the literature on oncologic long-term outcomes and morbidity and mortality in cancer surgery a systematic review of the literature was performed. METHODS PubMed was searched for relevant articles (published from 2000 to 2018). Retrieved abstracts were independently screened for relevance and data were extracted from selected studies by two researchers. RESULTS Included were 37 studies with 3112 patients receiving MVR for colorectal cancer (1095 for colon cancer, 1357 for rectal cancer, and in 660 patients origin was not specified). The most common resected organs were the small intestine, bladder and reproductive organs. Median postoperative morbidity rate was 37.9%(range: 7% to 76.6%) and median postoperative mortality rate was 1.3%(range: 0% to 10%). The median conversion rate for laparoscopic MVR was 7.9%(range: 4.5% to 33%). The median blood loss was lower after laparoscopic MVR compared to the open approach (60 mL vs 638 mL). Lymph-node harvest after laparoscopic MVR was comparable. Report on survival rates was heterogeneous, but the 5-year overall-survival rate ranged from 36.7% to 90%, being worst in recurrent rectalcancer patients with a median 5-year overall survival of 23%. R0 -resection, primary disease setting and no lymph-node or lymphovascular involvement were the strongest predictors for long-term survival. The presence of true malignant adhesions was not exclusively associated with poorer prognosis. Included were 16 studies with 1.600 patients receiving MVR for gastric cancer. The rate of morbidity ranged from 11.8% to 59.8%, and the main postoperative complications were pancreatic fistulas and pancreatitis, anastomotic leakage, cardiopulmonary events and post-operative bleedings. Total mortality was between 0% and 13.6% with an R0 -resection achieved in 38.4% to 100% of patients. Patients after R0 resection had 5-year overall survival rates of 24.1% to 37.8%. CONCLUSION MVR provides, in a selected subset of patients, the possibility for good long-term results with acceptable morbidity rates. Unlikelihood of achieving R0 -status, lymphovascular- and lymph -node involvement, recurrent disease setting and the presence of metastatic disease should be regarded as relative contraindications for MVR.