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Clinical outcome of intraoperative pelvic hyperthermochemotherapy for patients with Dukes' C rectal cancer

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14

References

1994

Year

Abstract

In attempts to prevent local recurrence after curative resection for rectal cancer, intraoperative pelvic hyperthermochemotherapy (IOPHC) was prescribed for 27 patients with Dukes' C cancer. The procedures used were as follows: immediately after amputation or resection of the rectum with extended lymphadenectomy, the pelvic cavity was filled with physiological saline containing 40 micrograms/ml mitomycin C, which was warmed at 45 degrees C for 90 min with an apparatus devised for IOPHC. Thirty-five patients who underwent surgery alone for Dukes' C rectal cancer within the same period served as controls. There was a local recurrence in three patients in the IOPHC group (11.1%), and in 13 in the control group (37.1%). With regard to hepatic or pulmonary metastasis, there was no difference between the two groups. There was no morbidity in the IOPHC treatment except for a large volume of exudate from the pelvic cavity. Thus, IOPHC can be considered as one option for limiting local recurrence after surgical resection of an advanced rectal cancer.

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