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Journal ArticleDOI

Ovarian and peritoneal psammocarcinoma: Results of a multicenter study on 25 patients.

Jean-Baptiste Delhorme1, Jean-Baptiste Delhorme2, Jordan Ohayon2, Sebastien Gouy2, Gerlinde Averous1, Catherine Genestie2, Léopold Gaichies2, Olivier Glehen, Jean-Marc Guilloit, Denis Pezet, François Quenet, Gwenael Ferron3, Cécile Brigand1, Philippe Morice2, Charles Honoré2, Julio Abba4, Karine Abboud5, Mohammad Alyami6, Catherine Arvieux4, Naoual Bakrin6, G. Balague, Vincent Barrau, Houda Ben Rejeb, J.M. Bereder, Isabelle Berton-Rigaud, Frédéric Bibeau7, Isabelle Bonnefoy6, Dominique Bouzard, I. Bricault4, S. Carrere, Cécile de Chaisemartin, Madleen Chassang, Anne Chevallier, Thomas Courvoisier, Peggy Dartigues2, Anthony Dohan, Julien Dubreuil6, Frédéric Dumont, Clarisse Eveno, Marie Faruch-Bilfeld, Juliette Fontaine6, Laure Fournier, Johan Gagnière, Delphine Geffroy, Laurent Ghouti, François-Noël Gilly6, Laurence Gladieff, Diane Goéré2, Aymeric Guibal, Frédéric Guyon, Bruno Heyd, Christine Hoeffel8, Constance Hordonneau, S. Isaac6, Peggy Jourdan-Enfer6, R. Kaci, R. Kianmanesh8, Catherine Labbé-Devilliers, Joëlle Lacroix, Bernard Lelong, Agnès Leroux-Broussier, Yoann Lherm, Rea Lo Dico, Gérard Lorimier, Caroline Malhaire9, Frédéric Marchal10, Pascale Mariani9, Emilie Mathiotte, Pierre Meeus, Eliane Mery, Simon Msika, Cédric Nadeau11, Pablo Ortega-Deballon, Guillaume Passot6, Olivier Pellet, P. Peyrat, Nicolas Pirro, Marc Pocard, Flora Poizat, Jack Porcheron, Anaïs Poulet6, Patrick Rat, Pierre Rousselot, P. Rousset6, Hélène Senellart, Martine Serrano6, Vincent Servois9, Olivia Sgabura, Andrea Skanjeti6, Magali Svrcek, Raphaël Tetreau, Emilie Thibaudeau, Yann Touchefeu, Jean-Jacques Tuech, Séverine Valmary-Degano, Delphine Vaudoyer6, Stéphane Velasco, Véronique Verriele-Beurrier, Laurent Villeneuve, Romuald Wernert, Franck Zinzindohoué 
01 May 2020-Ejso (Eur J Surg Oncol)-Vol. 46, Iss: 5, pp 862-867
TL;DR: Complete cytoreductive surgery is the cornerstone of the PK's management as a primary treatment and was associated with a better OS and DFS in a univariate analysis.
Abstract: Purpose Psammocarcinoma (PK) is a rare disease of unknown origin. We aimed to report the characteristics, management and survival of patients operated on for PK within the French Network for Rare Peritoneal Malignancies (RENAPE) expert centers. Patients and methods All consecutive cases of PK operated within all 26 RENAPE centers between 1997 and 2018 were retrospectively analyzed. Results Twenty-five patients were identified. The median age was 53 years [range 17–78]. None of the patients had extra peritoneal metastases at diagnosis. A median of 6 cycles of carboplatin-based systemic chemotherapy was delivered in 52% preoperatively (n = 13) and 56% postoperatively (n = 14); associated with placlitaxel for 12 patients. All patients were operated on. The median PCI was 23 [0–33]. Eighty-four percent had a complete cytoreductive surgery through digestive (n = 7), spleen (n = 3), pancreas (n = 1) resections and/or multiple peritonectomies (n = 11). Five patients (20%) had intraperitoneal chemotherapy. Morbidity (Dindo-Clavien ≥3) was 12%. No postoperative death occurred. After a median follow-up of 42 months (range [2–194]), the median overall (OS) and progression-free (DFS) survival times were respectively 128 months and 31 months. Eighteen patients recurred (72%), mainly in the peritoneum (n = 16). Four of them (22%) were reoperated. The 5 and 10-year DFS rates were both 20.3%. The 5 and 10-year OS rates were 62% and 51.7%, respectively. A complete cytoreductive surgery was associated with a better OS and DFS in a univariate analysis. Conclusion Complete cytoreductive surgery is the cornerstone of the PK's management as a primary treatment. Recurrence remains common and new adjuvant strategies seem needed.
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article , the authors describe a cohort who received contemporary primary treatment for stage II-IV low grade serous ovarian/peritoneal cancer (LGSOC), including patient characteristics and determinants of relapse and disease-free survival.

4 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A rare case of PPP in a 74-year-old female, discovered fortuitously within a laparotomy for gallbladder lithiasis, found that both ovaries were intact having a normal size and died of SARS-CoV-2 six days after surgery.
Abstract: Psammocarcinoma is an uncommon subtype of low-grade serous carcinoma. It is characterized by the presence of extensive psammoma bodies and can have either an ovarian or peritoneal origin. To our knowledge fewer than 30 cases of primary peritoneal psammocarcinoma (PPP) have been reported in the English literature. We report a rare case of PPP in a 74-year-old female, discovered fortuitously within a laparotomy for gallbladder lithiasis. At laparotomy, multiple nodular implants involving the omentum, the peritoneum and a magma of intestinal loops in the right iliac fossa were noted. A biopsy from nodules was performed. Gross examination showed multiple nodules of different sizes in the fat tissue. Pathologic examination showed massive psammoma bodies representing more than 75% of the tumor. The final diagnosis was psammocarcinoma. Our patient was referred to the gynecologic department for further investigation and to ascertain whether the tumor arose from the ovaries or peritoneum. Hysterectomy, bilateral adnexectomy and omentectomy were performed. Macroscopic examination showed that both ovaries were intact having a normal size. No invasion of ovarian stroma was shown in microscopic examination. The patient died of SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) six days after the surgery. PPP is a rare type of low-grade serous carcinoma. The behavior of this tumor is unclear, and the treatment is not standardized because of its rarity and lack of long-term follow-up. More cases need to be studied for better understanding and improvement of the management protocols.

2 citations

References
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The new complication classification appears reliable and may represent a compelling tool for quality assessment in surgery in all parts of the world.
Abstract: Growing demand for health care, rising costs, constrained resources, and evidence of variations in clinical practice have triggered interest in measuring and improving the quality of health care delivery. For a valuable quality assessment, relevant data on outcome must be obtained in a standardized and reproducible manner to allow comparison among different centers, between different therapies and within a center over time.1–3 Objective and reliable outcome data are increasingly requested by patients and payers (government or private insurance) to assess quality and costs of health care. Moreover, health policy makers point out that the availability of comparative data on individual hospital's and physician's performance represents a powerful market force, which may contribute to limit the costs of health care while improving quality.4 Conclusive assessments of surgical procedures remain limited by the lack of consensus on how to define complications and to stratify them by severity.1,5–8 In 1992, we proposed general principles to classify complications of surgery based on a therapy-oriented, 4-level severity grading.1 Subsequently, the severity grading was refined and applied to compare the results of laparoscopic versus open cholecystectomy9 and liver transplantation.10 This classification has also been used by others11–13 and was recently suggested to serve as the basis to assess the outcome of living related liver transplantation in the United States (J. Trotter, personal communication). However, the classification system has not yet been widely used in the surgical literature. The strength of the previous classification relied on the principle of grading complications based on the therapy used to treat the complication. This approach allows identification of most complications and prevents down-rating of major negative outcomes. This is particularly important in retrospective analyses. However, we felt that modifications were necessary, particularly in grading life-threatening complications and long-term disability due to a complication. We also felt that the duration of the hospital stay can no longer be used as a criterion to grade complications. Although definitions of negative outcomes rely to a large extend on subjective “value” appraisals, the grading system must be tested in a large cohort of patients. Finally, a classification is useful only if widely accepted and applied throughout different countries and surgical cultures. Such a validation was not done with the previous classification. Therefore, the aim of the current study was 3-fold: first, to propose an improved classification of surgical complications based on our experience gained with the previous classification1; second, to test this classification in a large cohort of patients who underwent general surgery; and third, to assess the reproducibility and acceptability of the classification through an international survey.

23,435 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The use of maintenance therapy with olaparib provided a substantial benefit with regard to progression‐free survival among women with newly diagnosed advanced ovarian cancer and a BRCA1/2 mutation, with a 70% lower risk of disease progression or death with olAParib than with placebo.
Abstract: Background Most women with newly diagnosed advanced ovarian cancer have a relapse within 3 years after standard treatment with surgery and platinum-based chemotherapy. The benefit of the o...

1,552 citations

Book ChapterDOI
TL;DR: Objective response criteria from CT scan, tumor marker, and radiolabeled monoclonal antibody studies are necessary in a regular follow-up schedule.
Abstract: Productive research in patients with peritoneal carcinomatosis has moved slowly over several decades. In large part this was due to lack of standardized assessments by which cancer responses could be quantitated in a reliable and statistically evaluable manner. Recently, both laboratory and clinical assessments have been developed. Clinical research has shown that the prognosis of patients with peritoneal carcinomatosis is dependent upon preoperative and intraoperative variables [1]. These are the histologic grade of the malignancy, the preoperative tumor volume as assessed at surgery, the distribution of tumor at surgery, and the completeness of cytoreductive surgery. Also the preoperative abdominal and pelvic computed tomography (CT) scan has shown predictive value in assessment of the completeness of cytoreduction in patients with mucinous carcinomatosis [2]. The clinical research tools that are currently used in peritoneal carcinomatosis studies are reviewed in this manuscript.

1,273 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Among patients with stage III epithelial ovarian cancer, the addition of hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) to interval cytoreductive surgery resulted in longer recurrence‐free survival and overall survival than surgery alone and did not result in higher rates of side effects.
Abstract: Background Treatment of newly diagnosed advanced-stage ovarian cancer typically involves cytoreductive surgery and systemic chemotherapy. We conducted a trial to investigate whether the addition of hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) to interval cytoreductive surgery would improve outcomes among patients who were receiving neoadjuvant chemotherapy for stage III epithelial ovarian cancer. Methods In a multicenter, open-label, phase 3 trial, we randomly assigned 245 patients who had at least stable disease after three cycles of carboplatin (area under the curve of 5 to 6 mg per milliliter per minute) and paclitaxel (175 mg per square meter of body-surface area) to undergo interval cytoreductive surgery either with or without administration of HIPEC with cisplatin (100 mg per square meter). Randomization was performed at the time of surgery in cases in which surgery that would result in no visible disease (complete cytoreduction) or surgery after which one or more residual tumors measu...

928 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Systematic pelvic and paraaortic lymphadenectomy in patients with advanced ovarian cancer who had undergone intraabdominal macroscopically complete resection and had normal lymph nodes both before and during surgery was not associated with longer overall or progression‐free survival and was associated with a higher incidence of postoperative complications.
Abstract: Background Systematic pelvic and paraaortic lymphadenectomy has been widely used in the surgical treatment of patients with advanced ovarian cancer, although supporting evidence from rando...

300 citations