| Literature DB >> 28187769 |
Lee S Kyang1, Nayef A Alzahrani2,3, Jing Zhao2, David L Morris2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Incidence of gastric perforation following cytoreductive surgery (CRS) and perioperative intraperitoneal chemotherapy (PIC) is not widely reported.Entities:
Keywords: Appendiceal cancer; Gastric perforation; HIPEC; Heated intraoperative intraperitoneal chemotherapy; Nasogastric tube; Peritonectomy; Stomach; Suction
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28187769 PMCID: PMC5303261 DOI: 10.1186/s12957-017-1114-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Surg Oncol ISSN: 1477-7819 Impact factor: 2.754
Characteristics of patients with gastric perforation following CRS and PIC at a tertiary referral centre (St. George Hospital) in Sydney
| Patient number; age; gender | Diagnosis | Procedures performed | PCIa | HIPECb (chemotherapy) | EPICc | Length of surgery (hours) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1; 62; M | Pseudomyxoma peritoneii (redo) | Peritonectomy, small bowel resection | 17 | Yes (MMCd) | No | 8.5 |
| 2; 58; F | Ovarian cancer | Peritonectomy, splenectomy, cholecystectomy, partial gastrectomy with Roux-En-Y anastomosis, small bowel resection, bilateral diaphragm strip | 32 | Yes (CDDPe) | No | 10.5 |
| 3; 41; F | Pseudomyxoma peritoneii | Peritonectomy, splenectomy, cholecystectomy, omentectomy, right hemicolectomy | 14 | Yes (MMC) | Yes | 10.0 |
| 4; 51; F | Peritoneal mesothelioma | Peritonectomy, bilateral diaphgram stripping, splenectomy, right hemicolectomy, cholecystectomy, segment II liver resection, pelvic stripping, omentectomy | 33 | Yes (CDDP) | No | 9.0 |
| 5; 44; M | Pseudomyxoma peritoneii | Peritonectomy, bilateral diaphragmatic stripping, splenectomy, pancreas stripping, liver surface stripping, cholecystectomy, Billroth I gastrectomy, right hemicolectomy, anterior resection | 39 | Yes (OXf) | No | 12.0 |
| 6; 48; F | Ovarian cancer | Peritonectomy, oophorectomy, salpingectomy, salpingooophorectomy, removal of ligaments (ovarian, paraovarian, fimbrial or broad ligaments), hysterectomy with rectum, bilateral diaphragm stripping, splenectomy, partial gastrectomy, left hepatectomy and creation of colostoma | 30 | Yes (OX) | No | 7.8 |
aPeritoneal cancer index
bHyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy
cEarly postoperative intraperitoneal chemotherapy
dMitomycin C
eCisplatin
fOxaliplatin
Operative and post-operative characteristics of the same set of patients
| Patient number; age; gender | Time from initial CRS to perforation diagnosis (days) | Indications of perforated viscus | Surgery or conservative | Location of stomach perforation | How was it fixed? | Length of hospital stay (days) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1; 62; M | 2 | Brown fluid in drain | Surgery | 5 mm adjacent to liver edge | Oversewn with vicryl | 24 |
| 2; 58; F | 9 | Ongoing peritonism with brownish discharge from abdominal wound despite unremarkable CT | Surgery | Above gastroenterostomy | Oversewn then with diaphragm patch | 55 |
| 3; 41; F | 7 | Peritonism, green billous fluid in drain | Conservative then surgery | Stomach body | Oversewn with vicryl | 44 |
| 4; 51; F | 10 | Peritonism, CT abdomen, green billous fluid in drain | Surgery | 3 mm, greater curvature of stomach | Oversewn with menseteric fat | 26 |
| 5; 44; M | 6 | Peritonism, CT abdomen | Surgery | 5 mm, greater curvature of proximal stomach | Oversewn with vicryl and plication | 34 |
| 6; 48; F | 3 | Green billous fluid in drain | Surgery | 5 mm, posterior gastric wall 1 cm away from greater curvature | Oversewn with vicryl and plication | 35 |
Fig. 1Postoperative nasogastric tube perforation (arrow), through the greater curvature of stomach, leading to bile peritonitis in patients who underwent CRS and HIPEC
Available literature documenting incidence of gastric perforation following CRS and PIC
| Reference | Study type | Aim | Number | Early or delayed complication | Origin | HIPEC | Mortality from complication | Management | Suggested possible mechanism |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kusamura et. al. [ | Retrospective observational study | To analyse morbidity and mortality of CRS and intraoperative hyperthermic infusion in treatment of peritoneal malignancies | 1/209 procedures | UCa | UC | Yes (UC) | No | Surgical | • Partial thickness mechanical and/or thermal damage to visceral surface (aggravated by heated chemotherapy) • Focal heat injury at tip of inflow catheter • Mechanical trauma due to suctioning effect of outflow catheter • Post-operative shrinking of infiltrating metastatic nodules on visceral wall from antiblastic effect of heated chemotherapy |
| Ceelen et. al. [ | Prospective study | To analyse safety and efficacy of HIPEC using high dose oxaliplatin in CRS | 1/52 patients | UC | UC | Yes (OX) | No | Surgical | Thermal damage during omentectomy using ultrasonic shears |
| Zappa et. al. [ | Retrospective observational study | To explore the cause and management of gastric perforation following CRS and HIPEC | 4/1251 patients | Early | • 3 appendiceal cancer • 1 ovarian cancer | Yes (1—MMC; 2—MMC + DOXc; 1—CDDP | No | Surgical | • Local seromuscular trauma to the greater curvature as a result of traction on the ligated blood vessel and vascular compromise • Damage of stomach wall from direct effects of chemotherapy, which is further amplified by poor perfusion • Nasogastric trauma secondary to suction during postoperative phase |
| Bhagwandin et. al. [ | Retrospective observational study | To analyse incidence of delayed major complications of CRS and HIPEC post-discharge | 1/140 procedures | Delayed | Mesothelioma | Yes (cisplatin, DOX) | No | Endoscopic clipping | NRb |
| Munoz-Casares et. al. [ | Retrospective observational study | To analyse long-term outcomes of CRS plus HIPEC | 1/218 patients | Delayed | Ovarian cancer | Yes (paclitaxel) | No | Surgical | NR |
| Martin et. al. [ | Retrospective observational study | To identify variables associated with readmission rates following CRS and HIPEC | NR | Delayed | UC | Yes (NR) | Yes (1 sepsis) | NR | NR |
aUnclear
bNot reported
cDoxorubicin