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Introduction. Surgery is an essential in treating ovarian cancer. Diagnosis, staging, and therapy are performed at the time of laparotomy Debulking (cytoreduction) is the surgical approach for ovarian carcinoma . Patterns of spread. Direct extensionExfoliation of clonogenic cellsLymphatic spread
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1. Debulking in Ovarian Cancer Ashraf Fawzy Nabhan
Assistant Prof. of Obstetrics & Gynecology
Ain Shams University, Cairo, Egypt
2. Introduction Surgery is an essential in treating ovarian cancer.
Diagnosis, staging, and therapy are performed at the time of laparotomy
Debulking (cytoreduction) is the surgical approach for ovarian carcinoma
3. Patterns of spread Direct extension
Exfoliation of clonogenic cells
Lymphatic spread
4. Rationale of debulking Cell kinetics
Log Cell-kill hypothesis
Gompertizian Growth hypothesis
Cell mutations
Goldie-Coldman hypothesis
5. Surgical staging Vertical incision
Peritoneal washings
TAH plus BSO
Pelvic & abdominal biopsies
Pelvic and paraaortic lymphadenectomy
appendectomy
6. Primary Debulking Early ovarian cancer
the procedure is the operative staging of the cancer
Advanced ovarian cancer
In addition to the procedure of the operative staging, some aggressive surgical procedures might be considered
7. Primary Debulking Aggressive surgical procedures
Multiple or extensive bowel resection
Rectosigmoid resection
Resection of ureteral/bladder segment
Diaphragm stripping
Resection of liver, spleen, kidney, diaphragm
8. Primary Debulking optimal primary debulking (residual disease <1 cm) is an independent prognostic factor
Even in patients with unresectable liver metastasis, optimal debulking of extrahepatic disease is associated with a significant survival advantage
9. Secondary Debulking Secondary debulking can be grouped into four clinical scenarios
Debulking for Recurrent Disease
Debulking at Second-look laparotomy
Interval “Chemosurgical” Debulking
Debulking for Progressive Disease
10. Secondary Debulking Debulking for Recurrent Disease
Those patients who enjoy a prolonged clinical disease free interval (>6 months) after completing primary therapy, and then develop recurrent disease.
11. Secondary Debulking Debulking at Second-look laparotomy
Patients who are clinically and radiologically free of disease after primary surgery and first-line chemotherapy, who are found to have macroscopic disease at second-look laparotomy.
12. Secondary Debulking Interval “Chemosurgical” Debulking
Patients with bulky, unresectable tumor discovered at initial surgery, who then undergo interval debulking surgery after neoadjuvant chemotherapy.
13. Secondary Debulking Debulking for Progressive Disease
Patients who have evidence of clinical disease progression while receiving first line therapy.
14. Complications of Debulking Intraoperative:
enterotomy
cystotomy
laceration of great vessel
coagulopathy
15. Complications of Debulking Postoperative: Infectious:
Urinary tract,
Wound,
Respiratory tract,
Peritonitis
16. Complications of Debulking Postoperative: Noninfectious:
Death,
DVT, Arterial thrombosis,
Fistula,
Prolonged ileus,
Bleeding gastric ulcer,
Intraabdominal bleeding
17. Critique of Debulking Tenets of surgical principles
Inherent biologic properties of ovarian cancer
Cellular kinetics
Fallacies of residual disease
Randomized data
18. Conclusion Optimal primary debulking improves response to chemotherapy & overall survival
Benefits of secondary debulking have not been clearly established
More randomized prospective studies are warranted