Literature DB >> 29807350

Diaphragm disease in advanced ovarian cancer: Predictability of pre-operative imaging and safety of surgical intervention.

Rachel Pounds1, Andrew Phillips2, Sean Kehoe3, James Nevin4, Sudha Sundar3, Ahmed Elattar4, Hong Giap Teo5, Kavita Singh4, Janos Balega6.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To establish the positive predictive values of pre-operative identification with CT imaging of metastatic diaphragm disease in surgically managed cases of advanced ovarian cancer (AOC). Additionally, we have assessed the post-operative morbidity and survival following diaphragmatic surgical intervention in a large regional cancer centre in the United Kingdom. STUDY
DESIGN: A retrospective review of all cases of AOC with metastatic diaphragm disease surgically treated at the Pan-Birmingham Gynaecological Cancer Centre, UK between 1st August 2007 and 29th February 2016.
RESULTS: A total of 536 women underwent surgery for primary AOC. Diaphragm disease was evident intra-operatively in 215/536 (40.1%) and 85/536 women (15.9%) underwent a procedure involving their diaphragm. Of these 85 cases, 38 peritoneal strippings (38/85, 44.7%), 31 partial diaphragmatic resections (31/85, 35.6%) and 16 electro-surgical ablations (16/85, 18.9%) were performed. There were no significant differences in post-operative complications between the three different diaphragmatic surgical groups. Of those patients who underwent peritoneal stripping or partial diaphragm resection, 12% were upstaged to stage 4A by virtue of pleural invasion. The positive predictive value for pre-operative radiological identification of diaphragmatic disease was 78.6%. CT imaging failed to detect diaphragmatic involvement despite obvious diaphragm disease during surgery in 29.4% of cases, giving a low negative predictive value of 64.8%. The sensitivity and specificity for CT imaging in detecting diaphragm disease was 44.3% and 93.8%, respectively.
CONCLUSIONS: Diaphragmatic disease is often discovered in AOC. However, pre-operative assessment with CT imaging is not reliable in accurately detecting diaphragm involvement. Therefore, all patients with AOC should be regarded as in potential need for diaphragm surgery and their operation undertaken in cancer centres with adequate expertise in upper abdominal surgery. If there is a suspicion of diaphragm muscle invasion during diaphragmatic peritonectomy, the muscle should be partially resected. This will lead to potential upstaging of disease to stage 4A and therefore, to suitability for targeted therapy. In our Centre, the surgical removal of diaphragmatic disease did not significantly increase surgical morbidity.
Copyright © 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Advanced ovarian cancer; Cytoreductive surgery; Diaphragm metastases; Diaphragmatic peritoneal stripping; Diaphragmatic resection

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29807350     DOI: 10.1016/j.ejogrb.2018.05.024

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Biol        ISSN: 0301-2115            Impact factor:   2.435


  2 in total

1.  Nitinol thin films functionalized with CAR-T cells for the treatment of solid tumours.

Authors:  Michael E Coon; Sirkka B Stephan; Vikas Gupta; Colin P Kealey; Matthias T Stephan
Journal:  Nat Biomed Eng       Date:  2019-12-09       Impact factor: 25.671

2.  Application of J-Plasma in the excision of diaphragmatic lesions as part of complete cytoreduction in patients with advanced ovarian cancer.

Authors:  Vasilios Theodoulidis; Anastasia Prodromidou; Emmanouil Stamatakis; Nicholas Alexakis; Alexandros Rodolakis; Dimitrios Haidopoulos
Journal:  Mol Clin Oncol       Date:  2022-05-18
  2 in total

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