What are complex pelvic tumors?
Complex pelvic tumors include:
- Local recurrences: Tumors that return in the pelvis after prior treatment (rectal, cervical, bladder, prostate cancer...).
- Locally advanced tumors: Tumors that have grown to involve multiple pelvic organs.
- Primary pelvic tumors: Sarcomas and other tumors originating in the pelvis.
These tumors present a surgical challenge because the pelvis is a confined space where vital organs are very close together.
Surgical options
Depending on the extent and location, different approaches can be considered:
Local resection
If the tumor is limited and can be removed without sacrificing vital organs, a more limited resection is performed.
Pelvic exenteration
In more extensive cases, removal of multiple pelvic organs may be necessary:
- Anterior: Bladder and internal genital organs.
- Posterior: Rectum and internal genital organs.
- Total: Bladder, rectum and internal genital organs.
Pelvic exenteration: what you should know
Pelvic exenteration is a major surgery that involves significant changes:
- Permanent stomas: Colostomy and/or urostomy are usually needed.
- Reconstruction: Techniques can be used to reconstruct bladder or vagina in some cases.
- Quality of life: Although it sounds drastic, many patients maintain good quality of life after adaptation.
- Curative objective: In well-selected patients it can achieve long-term cure.
Patient selection
Not everyone is a candidate for this type of surgery. Factors that are evaluated:
- Possibility of removing all tumor with clear margins
- Absence of distant metastases (outside the pelvis)
- General health sufficient to tolerate a major surgery
- Patient understanding and acceptance of life changes
The decision is made as a team, with the patient and multidisciplinary involvement.
Recovery
Recovery after complex pelvic surgery requires time:
- Hospitalization: 10-21 days depending on complexity.
- Stoma care learning: Specialized nurses teach stoma management.
- Rehabilitation: Physical therapy may be needed.
- Emotional adaptation: Psychological support is important.
- Progressive return: Gradual return to normal activities.
Life with a stoma
If you will need a stoma (colostomy or urostomy):
- It is an adaptation, but most manage well.
- There are modern devices that are comfortable and discreet.
- You can maintain an active life, work, travel, swim...
- Stoma nurses will guide you throughout the process.
- There are patient associations that can help.
Results
In well-selected patients:
- 5-year survival rates of 40-60% in many cases
- Quality of life generally good after adaptation
- Possible cure for tumors otherwise incurable
Success depends on careful selection and a team experienced in these surgeries.
Do you want an evaluation of your case?
We have experience in complex pelvic surgery. We can evaluate your options.
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