abstract
INTRODUCTION:
Complete
cytoreductive surgery (CCRS) plus hyperthermic intraperitoneal
chemotherapy (HIPEC) is the gold standard for curative treatment of
peritoneal carcinomatosis (PC) arising from colorectal cancer,
peritoneal mesothelioma and peritoneal pseudomyxoma peritonei (PMP). The
results of HIPEC remain controversial in PC that originates from
ovarian cancer, stomach cancer, neuroendocrine tumors, or sarcoma. HIPEC
has also been used, although very rarely, for other malignant
carcinomatoses. Its use has been exceptional due either to the rarity of
the tumor or because such disease is usually widespread and rarely
confined to the peritoneum. The aim of this study was to evaluate the
results of CCRS plus HIPEC in patients with PC of unusual origin.
METHODS:
We
performed a retrospective analysis of all patients who underwent CCRS
plus HIPEC
for PC whose origin was neither gastric, ovarian or
colorectal carcinoma, nor neuroendocrine tumor, mesothelioma, PMP or
sarcoma.
RESULTS:
Between
1995 and 2013, 31 patients with 15 PC arising from unusual primary
tumors underwent CCRS plus HIPEC. After a median follow-up of 90 months,
10 patients were alive and without recurrence. The overall survival
rate at 5 years was 33% with a median survival of 37 months.
In
univariate analysis, factors of poor prognosis and predictors of
recurrence were the performance of immediate postoperative
intraperitoneal chemotherapy instead of HIPEC and a peritoneal
index ≥ 12. No prognostic impact due to tumor origin could be
demonstrated.
CONCLUSION:
The
decision to perform CCRS plus HIPEC for PC arising from unusual cancer
origins remains difficult. These patients should be prospectively
entered into registries of
rare tumors that involve the peritoneum in
order to better define indications.
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