When invasive cervical cancer involves the urinary bladder or rectum, exenteration can be curative treatment. However, this operation, particularly by an open approach, carries significant morbidity, both physically and psychologically. Laparoscopic surgery has been documented to be a reasonable alternative to the open counterpart for a variety of pelvic operative procedures, including such advanced procedures as laparoscopy-assisted vaginal hysterectomy, total laparoscopic hysterectomy, and laparoscopy radical hysterectomy. With improving surgical technology and increasing surgical experience, exenteration is a logical extension of current laparoscopic practice. However, it raises skepticism regarding the feasibility and justification for the complicated surgery. We herein describe our experience in a patient undergoing total exenteration assisted by laparoscopic technology for advanced recurrent cervical cancer after extensive radiotherapy. Transperitoneal laparoscopic total exenteration with ureterosigmoidstomy and end-sigmoidostomy was accomplished in 6 hours. The whole specimen was removed en bloc transvaginally. The patient tolerated the procedure well. The only complication was a wound infection 50 days postoperatively that was controlled with debridement and antibiotics. No episodes of pyelonephritis occurred. After 1 year of follow-up, the patient is free of cancer by imaging studies and lives without associated morbidity of this extensive palliative operation except the care of the sigmoid colostomy.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/end.2004.18.867 | DOI Listing |
Cancers (Basel)
January 2025
Southampton Complex Cancer and Exenteration Team, University Hospital Southampton, Southampton SO16 6YD, UK.
Conventional pelvic exenteration (PE) comprises the removal of all or most central pelvic organs and is established in clinical practise. Previously, tumours involving bone or lateral sidewall structures were deemed inoperable due to associated morbidity, mortality, and poor oncological outcomes. Recently however high-complexity PE is increasingly described and is defined as encompassing conventional PE with the additional resection of bone or pelvic sidewall structures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Surg Oncol
January 2025
Division of Colorectal Surgery, Changzheng Hospital, Navy Medical University, Shanghai, China.
Background: Local relapse has not been eradicated even in the era of total mesorectum excision. Although various approaches have been attempted, R0 resection remains the only potentially curative treatment. PATIENT AND METHODS: A 45-year-old woman with a history of laparoscopic abdominoperineal resection was diagnosed with pelvic recurrence 7 months ago.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Evaluate the feasibility of the midface degloving approach (MDA) in total maxillectomy without orbital exenteration (TMWOE) and reconstruction for sino-nasal neoplasms.
Study Design: Retrospective case series.
Setting: Tertiary referral center.
Ophthalmol Sci
October 2024
International Centre for Eye Health, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, United Kingdom.
Purpose: To study the treatment and outcomes of children with retinoblastoma (RB) with extraocular tumor extension (RB-EOE) and compare them with RB without extraocular tumor extension (RB-w/o-EOE).
Design: Multicenter intercontinental collaborative prospective study from 2017 to 2020. RB-EOE cases included those with overt orbital tumor extension in treatment-naive patients.
Dis Colon Rectum
December 2024
Surgical Outcomes Research Centre (SOuRCe), Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Sydney, Australia.
Background: The treatment of locally recurrent rectal cancer has evolved dramatically in recent decades. As the boundaries of exenterative surgery continue to be pushed, one of the unanswered and controversial questions is the role of radical salvage surgery for locally recurrent rectal cancer in the setting of oligometastatic disease.
Objective: To investigate the impact of synchronous or previously treated distant metastases on survival following pelvic exenteration for locally recurrent rectal cancer.
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