Hemodynamic and Cardiac Function Parameters During HeatedIntraoperative Intraperitoneal Chemotherapy Using the Open
“Coliseum Technique”
Jesus Esquivel, MD, Francisco Angulo, MD, Rebecca K. Bland, CRNA,Arvil D. Stephens, BS, and Paul H. Sugarbaker, MD
Background: Heated intraoperative intraperitoneal chemotherapy achieves high peritoneal con-centrations with limited systemic absorption and has become an important tool in the managementof patients with peritoneal carcinomatosis from low-grade malignancies such as pseudomyxomaperitonei and in selected cases of high-grade tumors such as colon adenocarcinoma. When the closedabdomen technique is used, its perioperative toxicity seems to be related to the hemodynamic andcardiac function changes associated with increased body temperature and increased intra-abdominalpressure.
Methods: Hemodynamic and cardiac function variables during heated intraoperative intraperi-toneal chemotherapy, using an open abdomen “coliseum technique,” were measured in 15 patientswith the use of a noninvasive esophageal Doppler monitor.
Results: The hemodynamic and cardiac function changes were characterized by an increasedheart rate, increased cardiac output and decreased systemic vascular resistance associated with anincreased body temperature, and decreased effective circulating volume with the urinary outputtending to decrease as the therapy progressed.
Conclusion: Heated intraoperative intraperitoneal chemotherapy with the open abdomen coli-seum technique induces a hyperdynamic circulatory state with an increased intravenous fluidrequirement and avoids changes because of increased intra-abdominal pressure. Hemodynamic andcardiac stability, as documented by normal blood pressure and adequate urinary output, can beachieved by liberal intravenous fluids, titrated to frequent urinary output determination.
Key Words: Heated intraoperative intraperitoneal chemotherapy—Operative monitoring.
Peritoneal carcinomatosis is a well-recognized entitythat affects a large number of patients worldwide everyyear. Recently, the treatment has undergone significantchanges that have had a measurable impact on the out-come of patients with peritoneal carcinomatosis fromboth high- and low-grade malignancies. Traditionally,the treatment would consist of surgical exploration, ex-tensive biopsies, and an extensive debulking of the tu-mor.1 Subsequently, the patient would be referred to amedical oncologist for systemic chemotherapy. Most ofthese patients suffered terribly, and in a median time ofapproximately 9 months for patients with carcinomatosis
from a high-grade tumor and 21⁄2 years for those withcarcinomatosis from a low-grade tumor such aspseudomyxoma peritonei, the patients died of intestinalobstruction and terminal starvation.
Recent advances in surgical technique, with the intro-duction of peritonectomy procedures, have allowed sur-geons to completely remove all visible tumor.2 Also,innovative strategies for the delivery of intraperitonealchemotherapy have changed the treatment of patientswith peritoneal carcinomatosis from a low-grade malig-nancy and in selective patients with high-grade tumorsfrom a palliative approach to a curative one.3 Five-yearsurvival rates of approximately 80% for patients withpseudomyxoma peritonei, and to 40% for patients withperitoneal carcinomatosis from a high-grade malignancysuch as colon cancer, have been achieved.1 It has beenpreviously reported that the effects of regional (intraperi-
Received June 29, 1999; accepted January 21, 2000.From The Washington Cancer Institute, Washington, DC.Address correspondence and reprint requests to: Paul H. Sugarbaker,
MD, FACS, FRCS, The Washington Cancer Institute, 110 IrvingStreet, NW, Washington, DC 20010; Fax: 1-202-877-8602.
Annals of Surgical Oncology,7(4):296–300Published by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins © 2000 The Society of Surgical Oncology, Inc.
296
toneal chemotherapy) can be maximized by deliveringthe chemotherapy at 42°C to 43°C. Heated intraoperativeintraperitoneal chemotherapy achieves high peritonealconcentrations with limited systemic absorption.4 Previ-ously, the techniques, pharmacokinetics, and safety con-siderations of the closed abdominal heated intraoperativeintraperitoneal chemotherapy have been reported.5 Defi-ciencies in the distribution of heat and chemotherapywith the closed technique prompted the development ofthe open “coliseum technique” to improve the distribu-tion of heat and drugs to all the abdominopelvic regions.
The purpose of this study was to report the changes inhemodynamic and cardiac function variables by using anoninvasive measurement during heated intraoperativeintraperitoneal chemotherapy with an open techniqueand to outline a strategy to prevent intraoperative com-plications.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
From September 24, 1997, to January 7, 1998, fifteenconsecutive patients (5 females and 10 males), betweenthe ages of 31 and 70 years, and weighing between 54and 133 kg, underwent cytoreductive surgery and heatedintraoperative intraperitoneal chemotherapy. None ofthese patients had known cardiac disease, hypertension,or pulmonary disease. A single patient had previousdoxorubicin chemotherapy but no ECG abnormalities orsigns of cardiomyopathy. The diagnosis on these patientsincluded pseudomyxoma peritonei (12 patients), perito-neal mesothelioma (2 patients), and gastrointestinal stro-mal tumor (1 patient). A standard technique for thedelivery of heated chemotherapy was used. By using theopen coliseum technique, the abdominopelvic lavagewas performed for 90 minutes with a heat exchanger, acardiopulmonary bypass pump, and a heater/cooler unit(3M Cardiovascular Inc., Ann Arbor, MI). Three liters of1.5% dextrose peritoneal dialysis solution containing12.5 mg/m2 of mitomycin C for males (maximum dose,25 mg) or 10.0 mg/m2 for females (maximum dose, 20mg) was heated and then infused into the abdomen via aTenckhoff (Quinton, Inc., Seattle, WA) catheter at a rateof approximately 1 liter per minute. The fluid was re-turned from the abdomen via four Jakson-Pratt drains byan outflow pump, which established the inflow-outflowcircuit.
Temperatures were measured with a Labcraft digitalthermometer (Curtin Matheson Scientific, Jessup, MD).The temperature at the inflow line was approximately44°C. The Tenckhoff temperature probe was maintainedbetween 43°C and 44°C, and a distant intra-abdominalsite averaged 39.6°C. An esophageal temperature probe
was used to check the patient’s body temperature. Ex-ternal cooling was provided with a cooling blanket toavoid systemic hyperthermia.
Throughout the perfusion, the surgeon continuouslymanipulated the intra-abdominal viscera to disperse bothheat and chemotherapy throughout all abdominopelvicregions. All reconstructive procedures were performedafter the heated intraoperative intraperitoneal chemother-apy was completed. Cardiac function and volume statuswere measured beat by beat during the 90-minute ther-apy by using an esophageal Doppler monitor (EDM).6
The central venous pressure was measured via a double-lumen central venous catheter. Continuous blood pres-sure monitoring was provided by an arterial radial line.Esophageal Doppler monitoring was performed with a6-mm noninvasive esophageal probe that was introducedthrough the nose and advanced into the esophagus at thelevel of the descending aorta. This stationary probe di-rects a continuous 4-MHz beam of ultrasound waves atblood flowing in the descending aorta. Alterations in thefrequency of the reflected ultrasound waves caused bythe moving blood cells are translated by the EDM into awaveform, recording the velocity of the blood againsttime and producing real-time information about left ven-tricular flow. Analysis of this waveform provides mea-surements of a range of cardiac variables. Once an ade-quate signal was obtained, the probe was secured to thenose with tape.
A baseline recording is performed 10 minutes beforethe heated chemotherapy lavage is started. Measure-ments included the following: heart rate, systolic anddiastolic blood pressure, central venous pressure, esti-mated cardiac output, estimated stroke volume, flowtime, peak velocity, cardiac index, and systemic vascularresistance. In addition, end-tidal CO2, urinary output,esophageal temperature, and Tenckhoff catheter temper-ature are also recorded. After the baseline reading, mea-surements are repeated every 10 minutes during the90-minute therapy and once again at 10 minutes aftercompletion of the therapy. The urinary output is recordedevery 15 minutes. A renal dose of dopamine (1.5mg/kg/min), liberal intravenous fluids (1500 ml/hour), and low-dose furosemide (20 mg) are used to keep urinary outputat more than 100 ml every 15 minutes. All urinary outputpatients tolerated the procedure well.
Once the therapy is finished, the remaining fluid isaspirated from the abdomen with two Yankawer suctionsand disposed of properly. The EDM is removed, andgastrointestinal anastomoses are performed as indicated.The patients are subsequently transferred to the postan-esthesia care unit.
297HEATED INTRAOPERATIVE INTRAPERITONEAL CHEMOTHERAPY
Ann Surg Oncol, Vol. 7, No. 4, 2000
RESULTS
The mean heart rate 10 minutes before the heatedintraoperative intraperitoneal chemotherapy was 89.7(SD, 17.6) beats per minute and had a steady increase to100 (SD, 15) beats per minute at 80 minutes, whichapproaches statistical significance (P 5 .09). Ten min-utes after stopping the lavage, the heart rate continued tobe elevated, at 98.7 (SD, 14) beats per minute (Table 1).
Both systolic and diastolic blood pressures did notshow any significant variation throughout the 90-minutetherapy, although both tended to decrease as the bodytemperature increased (Table 1). The mean central ve-nous pressure before the chemotherapy was started was18 (SD, 05.8) mm Hg and remained without any signif-icant change throughout the course (Table 1).
The mean estimated cardiac output before starting was8.2 (01.5) liters/min and increased steadily, reaching amaximum at 70 minutes of 9.9 (03.0) liters/min andremaining elevated even 10 minutes after the therapywas terminated. This increment in the cardiac output wasstatistically significant (P 5 .04) (Table 1). As expected,the mean estimated cardiac index also had a steadyincrement and also peaked at 70 minutes; however, thisincrement was not statistically significant (P 5 .06). In asimilar manner, the peak velocity, which reflects cardiaccontractility, increased from a pretherapy value of 89.0(SD, 18.7) cm/sec to a maximum of 97.8 (SD, 24.7)cm/sec at 90 minutes and remained elevated 10 minutesafter therapy with a mean of 94.0 (SD, 28.4) cm/sec.
Both stroke volume and flow time decreased duringthe first 20 minutes of therapy and then increased grad-ually, attaining the highest values at 70 minutes, and thendecreased again during the last 20 minutes of therapy.None of these changes was statistically significant (Table1). Systemic vascular resistance decreased as patienttemperature increased,and it began to increase after thetherapy was finished but was still below the baselinelevel 10 minutes after therapy was concluded. Its lowestpoint correlated with the highest cardiac output.
The end-tidal CO2 had a mean baseline of 31.6 (SD,1.99) torr and increased constantly to a maximum of 34.6(SD, 2.35) torr at 70 minutes; it then had a small declinebut 10 minutes after therapy was still above the baseline.As shown in Table 1, these changes were statisticallysignificant (P 5 .002).
Patient temperature, which was recorded with anesophageal probe, had a pretreatment mean value of35.9°C (SD, 0.95°C) and increased constantly as theheated intraperitoneal chemotherapy was given. Itreached its maximum value at 80 minutes, at 38.3°C (SD,0.97°C), and started decreasing as soon as the therapy
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298 J. ESQUIVEL ET AL.
Ann Surg Oncol, Vol. 7, No. 4, 2000
was finished. This increment was statistically significantwith P , .0001. Meanwhile, the temperature at theTenckhoff catheter fluctuated between 43.6°C (SD,1.53°C) and 44.5°C (SD, 1.59°C) (Table 1).
Urinary output was measured every 15 minutes andwas kept at more than 100 ml by giving a renal dose ofdopamine (1.5mg/kg/min) throughout the heated ther-apy, along with intravenous fluids at 1500 ml/hour ofcrystalloid and forced diuresis with furosemide asneeded.
DISCUSSION
Heated intraoperative intraperitoneal chemotherapyhas become one of the techniques of the surgical oncol-ogist and it is being used with increasing frequencyworldwide as the safety, morbidity rate, and therapeuticconsiderations are better understood and recognized. Theindications for this particular method of treatment con-tinue to increase in number, and it is now accepted aspart of the treatment of gastrointestinal and ovarian ma-lignancies that have disseminated throughout the perito-neal cavity and that have been adequately cytoreduced.Also, to prevent peritoneal seeding and resection siterecurrence, it is being used as an adjuvant treatment formalignancies that have perforated a hollow viscus. Onoccasion, this regimen is used in patients with intractableascites from peritoneal surface malignancies such asperitoneal mesothelioma.
Patients developed a hyperdynamic circulatory statethat was characterized by a steady increase in heart rateand cardiac output that reached its maximum at between70 and 80 minutes. These changes correlated with thepatients’ maximum increase in venous capacitance andmaximal esophageal temperature. In addition, the highestend-tidal CO2 was also reached during this period. As thebody temperature decreased after completion of theheated therapy, the hyperdynamic circulatory state beganto normalize, although it was still above baseline 10minutes after the chemotherapeutic lavage was con-cluded.
Perioperative management of patients who undergocytoreductive surgery for peritoneal carcinomatosis is achallenge to the anesthesiologist. These patients have alarge abdominal incision with great insensible fluidlosses, are in the operating room for many hours, andmost of them have had a large volume of ascites drained.Therefore, it is imperative that if a new method oftreatment is to be instituted, special attention should begiven to its potential perioperative complications. Safetyconsiderations and postoperative morbidity rates withthese techniques have been reported previously.5 Kana-
koudis et al.7 reported that most of the perioperativecomplications and changes in cardiac and hemodynamicfunctions during the heated intraoperative intraperitonealchemotherapy were related not only to the acute changesof the body temperature but also to the increased intra-abdominal pressure secondary to the increased intra-abdominal fluid and a closed abdominal wall. Theystrongly advised extensive hemodynamic monitoring inpatients who underwent heated intraoperative intraperi-toneal chemotherapy.
Our data suggest that the hemodynamic and cardiacfunction alterations, observed during heated intraopera-tive intraperitoneal chemotherapy using the coliseumtechnique, seem to be determined by the thermal stressinduced in the patient with its subsequent hyperdynamiccirculatory state. Incremental increases of patient coretemperature were associated with (1) increased cardiacoutput, (2) decreased systemic vascular resistance, (3)increased heart rate, and (4) increased end-tidal CO2.
Use of constant noninvasive monitoring provided bythe EDM caused administration of sufficient intravenousfluids to keep preload relatively constant during thehyperthermic therapy. The mean infusion rate per hour ofintravenous fluids, as measured in 10 patients before theEDM was used, was 1220 ml/hour. When measured in10 patients in whom the EDM was used, the meaninfusion rate per hour increased to 1781 ml/hour. Thisfluid administration enabled the anesthesiologist tomaintain an adequate effective circulating volume de-spite the decrease in systemic vascular resistance asso-ciated with the patient’s vasodilation as a consequence ofthe increasing temperature. There were no significantchanges in the patient systolic or diastolic blood pres-sures, and the central venous pressure remained rela-tively unchanged. It seems that the most physiologicalmaneuver, to minimize intraoperative complications, isto maintain an adequate effective circulating volume bygiving liberal intravenous fluids, which counteracts theincreased venous capacitance.
In two patients, a Swan-Ganz catheter was placed atthe same time as the EDM, and there seemed to be anadequate correlation between cardiac output determinedby the thermodilution method using the Swan-Ganz cath-eter and cardiac output determined by use of the EDM.Before this study, patients with compromised cardiopul-monary function had been monitored by using a Swan-Ganz catheter during cytoreductive surgery and heatedintraoperative intraperitoneal chemotherapy. At present,however, the EDM is used when more precise andminute-to-minute cardiac output monitoring is thought tobe necessary, and Swan-Ganz monitoring has been dis-continued altogether. To detect trends in cardiac func-
299HEATED INTRAOPERATIVE INTRAPERITONEAL CHEMOTHERAPY
Ann Surg Oncol, Vol. 7, No. 4, 2000
tion, we believe that the EDM is a useful tool to generatevaluable information in an easy, noninvasive, and repro-ducible way that permits rapid intervention by the anes-thesiologist during the operation.
The EDM was easily inserted and provided immediateand constant information on cardiac function and volumestatus. It was not associated with any complications thatmay have occurred with a pulmonary artery catheter,such as sepsis, arrythmias, or formation of thrombi.Since analysis of these 15 patients, we have performedmore than 100 heated intraoperative intraperitoneal che-motherapy treatments without having to prematurely ter-minate any of them. Our monitoring equipment consistsof a central venous pressure line, a radial arterial line, anECG monitor, and a Foley catheter. In addition, in se-lected patients with a significant cardiac history, we usethe noninvasive EDM during heated intraoperative intra-peritoneal chemotherapy. A renal dose of dopamine,furosemide, and liberal intravenous fluids, to keep theurinary output at more than 100 ml every 15 minutes, aregiven routinely.
REFERENCES
1. Sugarbaker PH, Ronnett BM, Archer A, et al.PseudomyxomaPeritoneiSyndrome In:Advances in Surgery, Vol. 30.St. Louis:Mosby-Year Book Inc., 1997:233–80.
2. Sugarbaker PH. Peritonectomy procedures.Ann Surg1995;221:29–42.
3. Sugarbaker PH, Averbach AM, Jacquet P, et al. A simplifiedapproach to hyperthermic intraoperative intraperitoneal chemo-therapy using a self retaining retractor. In:Sugarbaker PH, ed.Peritoneal Carcinomatosis: Principles of Management.Norwell,MA: Kluwer, 1996:415–21.
4. Jacquet P, Averbach AM, Stephens AD, Stuart OA, Chang D,Sugarbaker PH. Heated intraoperative intraperitoneal mitomycin Cand early postoperative intraperitoneal 5-fluorouracil: pharmaco-kinetics studies.Oncology1998;55:130–8.
5. White SK, Stephens AD, Sugarbaker PH. Hyperthermic intraop-erative intraperitoneal chemotherapy: safety considerations.AORNJ 1996;63:716–24.
6. Singer M. Esophageal Doppler monitoring of aortic blood flow:beat by beat cardiac output monitoring.Int Anesthesiol Clin1993;31:99–125.
7. Kanakoudis F, Petrou A, Michaloudis D, Chortaria G, Konstan-tinidou A. Anaesthesia for intra-peritoneal perfusion of hyperther-mic chemotherapy: haemodynamic changes, oxygen consumptionand delivery.Anaesthesia1996;51:1033–6.
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