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Realistic Programs In Promising Hope for Gynecologic Cancer

Patients that have gynecologic cancer have fresh new expectation with a creative technology now made available at the Seidman Cancer Center at University Hospitals Case Medical Center. A team of cancer specialists, led by Robert DeBernardo, MD, is among the first in the nation to launch a dedicated program using Hyperthermic Intraperitoneal Chemotherapy (HIPEC) to treat ovarian, endometrial and select other cancers.

Undertaken immediately following surgical treatment, HIPEC supplies heated chemotherapy through a ‘hot bath’ into the abdominal cavity, where it can penetrate diseased tissue directly. After the physician takes out the maximum visible cancer as possible, a heated, a sterilized chemotherapy solution is circulated all through the abdomen through a technically advanced perfusion process to kill the residual cancer cells.

“This is a new and potentially revolutionary way of treating women with gynecologic cancers, which tend to be quite responsive to chemotherapy,” says Dr. DeBernardo, gynecologic oncologist at UH Case Medical Center and Assistant Professor at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine. “Our preliminary data and experience has been overwhelmingly positive and the therapy has been well-tolerated and effective. HIPEC promises to extend lives in a meaningful way.”

HIPEC has been used for years for public health care in patients with colon, pseudomyxomas, malignant mesothelioma and appendiceal cancer, types of cancer that in general are not receptive to chemotherapy, but it is now looked at as a promising brand new treatment method for gynecologic malignancy.

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