- Leiting, Jennifer L;
- Cloyd, Jordan M;
- Ahmed, Ahmed;
- Fournier, Keith;
- Lee, Andrew J;
- Dessureault, Sophie;
- Felder, Seth;
- Veerapong, Jula;
- Baumgartner, Joel M;
- Clarke, Callisia;
- Mogal, Harveshp;
- Staley, Charles A;
- Zaidi, Mohammad Y;
- Patel, Sameer H;
- Ahmad, Syed A;
- Hendrix, Ryan J;
- Lambert, Laura;
- Abbott, Daniel E;
- Pokrzywa, Courtney;
- Raoof, Mustafa;
- LaRocca, Christopher J;
- Johnston, Fabian M;
- Greer, Jonathan;
- Grotz, Travis E
Background
Cytoreductive surgery (CRS) with hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) for peritoneal carcinomatosis can be performed in two ways: Open or closed abdominal technique.Aim
To evaluate the impact of HIPEC method on post-operative and long-term survival outcomes.Methods
Patients undergoing CRS with HIPEC from 2000-2017 were identified in the United States HIPEC collaborative database. Post-operative, recurrence, and overall survival outcomes were compared between those who received open vs closed HIPEC.Results
Of the 1812 patients undergoing curative-intent CRS and HIPEC, 372 (21%) patients underwent open HIPEC and 1440 (79%) underwent closed HIPEC. There was no difference in re-operation or severe complications between the two groups. Closed HIPEC had higher rates of 90-d readmission while open HIPEC had a higher rate of 90-d mortalities. On multi-variable analysis, closed HIPEC technique was not a significant predictor for overall survival (hazards ratio: 0.75, 95% confidence interval: 0.51-1.10, P = 0.14) or recurrence-free survival (hazards ratio: 1.39, 95% confidence interval: 1.00-1.93, P = 0.05) in the entire cohort. These findings remained consistent in the appendiceal and the colorectal subgroups.Conclusion
In this multi-institutional analysis, the HIPEC method was not independently associated with relevant post-operative or long-term outcomes. HIPEC technique may be left to the discretion of the operating surgeon.