The most successful method for esophageal reconstruction in the early 20th century was the jejunodermatoesophagoplasty after Lexer, involving the presternal formation of a skin tube for passage reconstruction. A 59-year-old patient presented to our hospital with adenocarcinoma at the dermatojejunostomy 47 years after undergoing a Lexer procedure. The neoesophagus was removed, and the passage was reconstructed by a retrosternal colonic interposition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Patients with advanced ovarian carcinoma of International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics (FIGO) Stage IIIC should be treated by radical surgical tumor debulking with the goal of complete tumor resection. Prolonged median survival can be achieved in those patients entirely free of tumor after surgery by the administration of postsurgical platinum/taxane-based chemotherapy regimens. However, residual tumor is present in the majority of patients, which limits survival prognosis.
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