1. Inflammatory Bowel Disease in Cytoreductive Surgery and Heated Intraperitoneal Chemotherapy.
- Author
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Ben-Yaacov A, Elbaz N, Schtrechman G, Adileh M, Levine O, Goldstein A, Beller T, Halpern N, Margalit O, Ben-Yacov G, Nissan A, and Laks S
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Retrospective Studies, Middle Aged, Colorectal Neoplasms pathology, Colorectal Neoplasms therapy, Adult, Aged, Adenocarcinoma therapy, Adenocarcinoma mortality, Adenocarcinoma pathology, Combined Modality Therapy, Treatment Outcome, Cytoreduction Surgical Procedures, Hyperthermic Intraperitoneal Chemotherapy, Peritoneal Neoplasms therapy, Peritoneal Neoplasms mortality, Peritoneal Neoplasms secondary, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases
- Abstract
Background: Inflammatory bowel diseases (IBDs) pose an increased risk of gastrointestinal cancer with especially worse prognosis. Cytoreductive surgery and heated intraperitoneal chemotherapy (CRS/HIPEC) improves outcomes in selected patients with colorectal peritoneal metastases. Little published data describes the outcomes of CRS/HIPEC in IBD patients., Methods: We performed a retrospective review of a prospectively maintained CRS/HIPEC database. Outcomes in patients with and without IBD were compared for short-term outcomes such as hospital/intensive care unit stay, blood loss/transfusions, complications, and reoperations. We also examined oncological outcomes including recurrence, overall (OS), and disease-free survival (DFS)., Results: We identified 232 patients that underwent CRS/HIPEC for colorectal or small bowel adenocarcinoma, of which 10 were with IBD. Patients with IBD had lower ASA ( p =0.005), less hypertension ( p =0.033), and 30% small bowel primary compared to none in the non-IBD cohort ( p <0.001). Otherwise, demographic and perioperative characteristics were similar between the groups. The median peritoneal cancer index (PCI) was 7 and similar between the cohorts ( p =0.422). Extent of organ resections and peritonectomies performed were similar. Complications occurred in 60.3% of patients (21.2% major), similar between the groups ( p=0.744 and p =0.444, respectively). Reoperation rate of 27% was similar between groups ( p =0.097). The median OS in the IBD cohort was 19.6 vs 53.2 months in the non-IBD cohort ( p = 0.056). The median DFS in the IBD cohort was 4.9 vs 9.4 months in the non-IBD cohort ( p =0.174)., Discussion: Cytoreductive surgery and heated intraperitoneal chemotherapy in patients with IBD has similar complication profile and trended towards poorer oncological outcomes as CRS/HIPEC in non-IBD patients., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting InterestsThe author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
- Published
- 2024
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