Our objective was to determine whether minilaparotomy could be a safe and feasible approach for the surgical treatment of early endometrial cancer patients and whether it could be considered a valid alternative to the laparoscopic treatment.A pilot study of 50 consecutive patients with FIGO stage I-IV endometrial cancer undergoing surgery at our Department was performed between May and December 2001. All patients were evaluated for a minimal transabdominal approach. Exclusion criteria were considered: special histotype, poorly differentiated tumors, clinical stage >/=Ic, Ca125 >35 U/ml, BMI >30, lymph nodal involvement assessed by MRI, and severe cardiopulmonary disease precluding steep Trendelenburg position.Twenty-six (52\%) cases were considered eligible for minilaparotomy. The mean age was 55.4 years and the mean BMI was 24.1. All patients underwent TAH, BSO, pelvic lymphadenectomy +/- omental or peritoneal biopsy. A mean number of 28 pelvic lymph nodes were removed. The mean operative time was 113.0 min and the mean intraoperative blood loss was 220.0 ml. There was 1 severe operative hemorrhage and 1 patient needed postoperative blood transfusion. No immediate complications of wound infection or separation occurred. The mean hospital stay was 3.4 days. Intra- and postoperative parameters were compared to laparotomy controls and literature data on laparoscopy, showing substantially comparable results.Minilaparotomy is a feasible alternative to the standard treatment in endometrial cancer patients. It offers the patient a cost-effective procedure that avoids many of the potential complications of standard therapy, prevents long hospital recovery periods, and accomplishes all of the important goals of standard recommendations.

Minilaparotomy in early stage endometrial cancer: an alternative to standard and laparoscopic treatment.

FAGOTTI, Anna;
2002

Abstract

Our objective was to determine whether minilaparotomy could be a safe and feasible approach for the surgical treatment of early endometrial cancer patients and whether it could be considered a valid alternative to the laparoscopic treatment.A pilot study of 50 consecutive patients with FIGO stage I-IV endometrial cancer undergoing surgery at our Department was performed between May and December 2001. All patients were evaluated for a minimal transabdominal approach. Exclusion criteria were considered: special histotype, poorly differentiated tumors, clinical stage >/=Ic, Ca125 >35 U/ml, BMI >30, lymph nodal involvement assessed by MRI, and severe cardiopulmonary disease precluding steep Trendelenburg position.Twenty-six (52\%) cases were considered eligible for minilaparotomy. The mean age was 55.4 years and the mean BMI was 24.1. All patients underwent TAH, BSO, pelvic lymphadenectomy +/- omental or peritoneal biopsy. A mean number of 28 pelvic lymph nodes were removed. The mean operative time was 113.0 min and the mean intraoperative blood loss was 220.0 ml. There was 1 severe operative hemorrhage and 1 patient needed postoperative blood transfusion. No immediate complications of wound infection or separation occurred. The mean hospital stay was 3.4 days. Intra- and postoperative parameters were compared to laparotomy controls and literature data on laparoscopy, showing substantially comparable results.Minilaparotomy is a feasible alternative to the standard treatment in endometrial cancer patients. It offers the patient a cost-effective procedure that avoids many of the potential complications of standard therapy, prevents long hospital recovery periods, and accomplishes all of the important goals of standard recommendations.
2002
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11391/992260
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