Background: Chemotherapy induces histopathological tumor necrosis and fibrosis which results in macroscopic tissue changes, making surgeons’ intraoperative visual evaluation of the disease distribution more difficult to interpret. The aim of the study was to assess the sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of intraoperative laparoscopic visual evaluation of the diaphragmatic peritoneum and compare it with histopathological examination. Methods: Patients receiving diaphragmatic peritonectomy at time of IDS were retrospectively included. The population was grouped based on the surgeon’s assessment of the diaphragmatic peritoneum during diagnostic laparoscopy. Group 1 included patients with a “visually pathologic” diaphragmatic peritoneum, and group 2 included patients with a “visually dubious” diaphragmatic peritoneum. Sensitivity, specificity, predictive values, and accuracy were calculated considering the final formalin-fixed pathology as the reference standard. Results: 155 patients were included (92 in group 1 and 63 in group 2). The accuracy rate of visual examination was 67.1%, the negative predictive value was 19%, specificity was 100%, and sensitivity was 64.3%. Conclusion: NACT strongly affects the ability of the surgeon to discern between peritoneal scars and truly pathologic peritoneum. The diaphragmatic laparoscopic visual examination showed a low overall accuracy. We propose an algorithm that can guide the surgeon towards a more tailored approach to diaphragmatic peritonectomy during IDS.

Costantini, B., Rosati, A., Vargiu, V., Gallitelli, V., Di Ilio, C., Moroni, R., Scambia, G., Fagotti, A., Visual Peritoneal Evaluation of Residual Disease After Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy in Advanced Ovarian Cancer Patients: The VIPER Study, <<ANNALS OF SURGICAL ONCOLOGY>>, 2023; (Feb): N/A-N/A. [doi:10.1245/s10434-022-12861-x] [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/228031]

Visual Peritoneal Evaluation of Residual Disease After Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy in Advanced Ovarian Cancer Patients: The VIPER Study

Costantini, Barbara;Gallitelli, Vitalba;Di Ilio, Chiara;Scambia, Giovanni;Fagotti, Anna
2023

Abstract

Background: Chemotherapy induces histopathological tumor necrosis and fibrosis which results in macroscopic tissue changes, making surgeons’ intraoperative visual evaluation of the disease distribution more difficult to interpret. The aim of the study was to assess the sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of intraoperative laparoscopic visual evaluation of the diaphragmatic peritoneum and compare it with histopathological examination. Methods: Patients receiving diaphragmatic peritonectomy at time of IDS were retrospectively included. The population was grouped based on the surgeon’s assessment of the diaphragmatic peritoneum during diagnostic laparoscopy. Group 1 included patients with a “visually pathologic” diaphragmatic peritoneum, and group 2 included patients with a “visually dubious” diaphragmatic peritoneum. Sensitivity, specificity, predictive values, and accuracy were calculated considering the final formalin-fixed pathology as the reference standard. Results: 155 patients were included (92 in group 1 and 63 in group 2). The accuracy rate of visual examination was 67.1%, the negative predictive value was 19%, specificity was 100%, and sensitivity was 64.3%. Conclusion: NACT strongly affects the ability of the surgeon to discern between peritoneal scars and truly pathologic peritoneum. The diaphragmatic laparoscopic visual examination showed a low overall accuracy. We propose an algorithm that can guide the surgeon towards a more tailored approach to diaphragmatic peritonectomy during IDS.
2023
Inglese
Costantini, B., Rosati, A., Vargiu, V., Gallitelli, V., Di Ilio, C., Moroni, R., Scambia, G., Fagotti, A., Visual Peritoneal Evaluation of Residual Disease After Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy in Advanced Ovarian Cancer Patients: The VIPER Study, <<ANNALS OF SURGICAL ONCOLOGY>>, 2023; (Feb): N/A-N/A. [doi:10.1245/s10434-022-12861-x] [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/228031]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10807/228031
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