HIPEC Complications with Rene Pareja, David Viveros-Carreño, and Beatriz Navarro Santana

In this episode of the IJGC podcast, Editor-in-Chief Dr. Pedro Ramirez is joined by Drs. Rene Pareja, David Viveros-Carreño, and Beatriz Navarro Santana to discuss HIPEC complications. Dr. Viveros-Carreño is a Gynecologic Oncologist at Instituto Nacional de Cancerología, Centro de Tratamiento e Investigación sobre Cáncer Luis Carlos Sarmiento Angulo (CTIC), and Clínica Universitaria Colombia in Bogotá, Colombia. Dr. Pareja is a gynecologist-oncologist at Astorga Oncology Clinic in Medellín and the National Cancer Institute in Bogotá, Colombia. Dr. Pareja is a reviewer for more than 20 specialty journals, and one of the Associate Editors for IJGC. He is the author of ten book chapters and more than 90 publications in peer-reviewed journals, and at IGCS 2021 he received an award for Community Advancement in Resource-Limited Settings. Dr. Navarro is a gynecologist-oncologist at Insular University hospital in Las Palmas, Spain. She also completed the ESGO fellowship at Institut Bergonie in France   Highlights: The study aimed to assess the complications associated with HIPEC in cytoreductive surgery for epithelial ovarian cancer, examining two distinct time periods (2004–2013 and 2014–2022). This systematic review analyzed 69 studies and including 4928 patients with advanced primary or recurrent epithelial ovarian cancer. No significant differences were observed in complication rates between the two time periods. Overall, complications, including blood transfusions, gastrointestinal, infectious, respiratory, urinary complications, and thromboembolic events, showed no significant change. Rates of ICU admissions, reoperations, and deaths also remained consistent over time. The study concluded that the overall complications associated with HIPEC in ovarian cancer surgery did not decrease, and there was no reduction in the rates of ICU admissions, reoperations, or deaths.

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