Surgery is still the cornerstone in the management of advanced epithelial ovarian cancer (AEOC) patients. It involves: i. establishment of diagnosis and staging; ii. primary cytoreduction; iii. interval cytoreduction, interval debulking surgery (IDS) or surgery after neoadjuvant chemotherapy; iv. secondary cytoreduction during the assessment of the status of the disease at the end of primary chemotherapy - second look; v. surgery for recurrence; vi. palliation. Substantial evidence exists to demonstrate that if surgery is performed by gynaecologists with a special training in gynaecological oncology, a survival advantage can be achieved when compared with that obtained when general surgeons are primarily treating AEOC. Primary surgery with diagnostic and cytoreductive intent should be performed in accordance with the European Guidelines of Staging in Ovarian Cancer. Whether or not cytoreduction should systematically include lymphadenectomy is still a controversial issue. The strong correlation between chemosensitivity, successful debulking surgery and survival strongly support the concept that it is the biological characteristic of the disease rather than the aggressiveness of the surgeon to allow a successful cytoreduction to the real optimal disease status. It should be now recognised as the complete absence of disease at the end of the surgical procedure. Both IDS and neoadjuvant chemotherapy represent a strong effort to achieve such a status through less morbidity and a better quality of life for the patient. Surgery for recurrence and palliation need to be optimised both in terms of patient selection and a better integration with chemotherapy and ancillary management.

Surgery of advanced malignant epithelial tumours of the ovary

ODICINO, Franco;PECORELLI, Sergio
2000-01-01

Abstract

Surgery is still the cornerstone in the management of advanced epithelial ovarian cancer (AEOC) patients. It involves: i. establishment of diagnosis and staging; ii. primary cytoreduction; iii. interval cytoreduction, interval debulking surgery (IDS) or surgery after neoadjuvant chemotherapy; iv. secondary cytoreduction during the assessment of the status of the disease at the end of primary chemotherapy - second look; v. surgery for recurrence; vi. palliation. Substantial evidence exists to demonstrate that if surgery is performed by gynaecologists with a special training in gynaecological oncology, a survival advantage can be achieved when compared with that obtained when general surgeons are primarily treating AEOC. Primary surgery with diagnostic and cytoreductive intent should be performed in accordance with the European Guidelines of Staging in Ovarian Cancer. Whether or not cytoreduction should systematically include lymphadenectomy is still a controversial issue. The strong correlation between chemosensitivity, successful debulking surgery and survival strongly support the concept that it is the biological characteristic of the disease rather than the aggressiveness of the surgeon to allow a successful cytoreduction to the real optimal disease status. It should be now recognised as the complete absence of disease at the end of the surgical procedure. Both IDS and neoadjuvant chemotherapy represent a strong effort to achieve such a status through less morbidity and a better quality of life for the patient. Surgery for recurrence and palliation need to be optimised both in terms of patient selection and a better integration with chemotherapy and ancillary management.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11379/465574
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