SummaryCytoreductive surgery with hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) is a long and complex procedure with significant blood and fluid loss during debulking and important pathophysiological alterations during the HIPEC phase. We performed a retrospective analysis of 78 consecutive patients undergoing cytoreductive surgery with HIPEC at a university hospital. Our data demonstrate large intra-operative fluid turnover, with 51% of patients requiring a blood transfusion. During HIPEC, airway pressure and central venous pressure increased with a lower oxygenation ratio as a result of increased intra-abdominal pressure with the closed abdomen technique. As a consequence of the raised body temperature, heart rate, end tidal carbon dioxide and arterial lactate levels increased with a slight metabolic acidosis. Peri-operative analysis of routine clotting parameters revealed disturbances of the coagulation status. For pain management, 72% of patients received supplementary thoracic epidural analgesia with consequential perioperative opioid sparing and a reduced duration of postoperative ventilation.
Conversion to an open procedure during laparoscopic rectal resection correlates with an increased postoperative morbidity, however, without impairment of the short-term oncological outcome. The conversion rate is minimized by the growing experience of the operating surgeon and, therefore, is a marker of the learning curve.
Anesthetic management importantly contributes to the containment of the perioperative complications of HIPEC. An appreciation of the technical aspects and physiologic disruptions associated with intra-abdominal HIPEC is critical to ensure effective anesthetic management. Although data on this specialized surgical procedure are scarce, some referral centers have accumulated extensive experience. This article reviews the current knowledge about the anesthesiological and intensive care management of patients undergoing HIPEC. It pinpoints strategies for perioperative monitoring as well as illustrates alterations in hemodynamic, hematopoetic, and fluid hemostasis.
Cytoreductive surgery with hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) has become an important tool in the management of patients with peritoneal malignancies. It is a complex surgical procedure with significant fluid loss during debulking leading to relevant pathophysiological alterations and therefore a challenge for anesthesiologists and critical care physicians. This review summarizes perioperative changes in hemodynamics, oxygen supply, coagulation, hematopoetic parameters and fluid status during cytoreductive surgery and HIPEC and how to deal with these pathophysiological alterations.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.