RESUMEN
To compare the diagnostic performance of routine CT (rCT), CT enterography (CTE) and intraoperative quantification of PCI to surgical and pathological reference standards in patients with advanced ovarian cancer, a retrospective study of 122 patients who underwent cytoreduction surgery for ovarian peritoneal carcinomatosis was conducted. Radiological, surgical, and pathological PCIs were obtained from the corresponding reports, and the latter two were considered reference standards. The radiological techniques used were rCT: 64 MDCT (32 × 1 mm) (100 mL iopromide 370 i.v., 800 mL water p.o.), and CTE: 64 MDCT (64 × 0.5 mm) (130 mL iopromide 370 i.v., 1800 mL mannitol solution p.o., 20 mg buscopan i.v.). Data were grouped by imaging technique and analyzed using total PCI and stratified by tumor burden (low-PCI < 10, high-PCI > 20). Agreement, diagnostic performance and degree of cytoreduction were evaluated. Disappointing results for rCT and CTE were obtained when using a surgical referent, but better diagnostic performance and concordance (0.86 vs. 0.78 vs. 0.62, p < 0.05) was observed when using a pathological referent-surgical PCI overestimates and overstaged patients. PCI is underestimated by rCT rather than CTE. For high-PCI, the ROC curve was mediocre for CTE and useless for rCT, as it failed to identify any cases. For low-PCI, the ROC was excellent (86% CTE vs. 75% rCT). In four cases with low-PCI as determined by rCT, cytoreduction was suboptimal. CTE has a better diagnostic performance than rCT in quantifying PCI in patients with advanced ovarian cancer, suggesting that CTE should be used as the initial technique. Surgical-PCI could be considered as an imperfect standard reference.
RESUMEN
Peritoneal carcinomatosis (PC) is a malignant entity with a high rate of morbimortality. It is considered an end-stage common to several abdominal and pelvic malignant tumours, such as epithelial ovarian, fallopian tubal and peritoneal cancer. Although many of these tumors have a good response to chemotherapy, prognosis is poor due to the high rate of recurrence. Surgeons, gynecologists and oncologists are increasingly concerned with improving the survival. The surgical technique described by Sugarbaker in the eighties is a plausible option. It aims for a complete resection of macroscopic carcinomatosis (cytoreductive surgery) followed by intraoperative or perioperative intraperitoneal chemotherapy. This therapeutic option necessarily involves specific multidisciplinary units; histopathology of specimens from this surgical technique is now more frequent in our department. We describe our initial experience with PC originating from epithelial ovarian, tubal and peritoneal cancer treated with the modified Sugarbaker surgery employed in our hospital. We outline our protocol designed to achieve uniformity in procedure, and summarize the initial results.