Surgery for Peritoneal Mets
 Cytoreductive Surgery and HIPEC can prolong survival in peritoneal disease.
Cytoreductive Surgery and HIPEC can prolong survival in peritoneal disease.
Hyperthermic or heated intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) surgery is a two-step procedure that can treat certain cancers in the abdomen, including peritoneal cancer. In this procedure, cancerous tumors are surgically removed in a cytoreductive surgery, then heated chemotherapy drugs are applied directly into the abdomen to eliminate any remaining cancerous cells
Peritoneal metastases from original cancers are often managed in a similar fashion to other sites of systemic metastases, but the following must be taken into consideration.
- PM do not respond to systemic chemotherapy in the same fashion as liver and lung metastases.
- PM cause local problems, resulting in disruption of chemotherapy.
- Cytoreductive surgery and hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (CRS-HIPEC) actually work for PM.
- PM are not easily detected on imaging modalities.
There has been mounting evidence of the effectiveness of CRS-HIPEC at prolonging survival in selected patients with colorectal and gastric PM.
Surgery, when possible, will likely be used in combination with chemotherapy, immuno-oncology, radiation, and interventional radiology procedures. A multidisciplinary team approach is an absolute must!
 
				 
															 
								 
								 
								