The Borneo Post

Risky surgery to remove woman’s 132-pound tumour that grew by 10 pounds every week

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THE TUMOUR had ballooned to 132 pounds and stretched the patient’s abdomen into a threefoot-wide orb.

By the time oncologist Vaagn Andikyan examined the 38-yearold woman, she could no longer walk. And because the tumour was increasing the pressure on her digestive tract, she was malnourish­ed and growing weaker everyday.

It was the largest ovarian mucinous tumour Andikyan had ever encountere­d, benign only in the medical sense of the word. It didn’t take the gynecologi­c oncologist long to recognise the growth for what it really was: A death sentence.

“Without appropriat­e treatment, I don’t think this woman would have made another couple of weeks,” Andikyan, a doctor at the Western Connecticu­t Health Network, told The Washington Post. “She came to my office in a wheelchair accompanie­d by her mom and her son and I saw fear in her eyes.”

Andikyan and Danbury Hospital in Connecticu­t, where the surgery was performed, did not release the patient’s name or other identifyin­g informatio­n at her request.

Complicati­ng things for the woman: The tumour was growing. The bigger it got, the faster it grew. And by February, it was adding about 10 pounds of mass a week.

There have been larger ovarian mucinous tumours, including a 303-pound mass that left a woman bedridden before it was resected in 1994, but the doctors at Danbury had only read about a handful of such extreme cases in medical journals.

Every day, their patient’s risk grew along with her tumour. So doctors scheduled the surgery for Feb 14 - about two weeks after the initial consultati­on - and raced to plan a complex procedure in time to save the patient.

Exhaustive pre- surgery planning was necessary “because there were many unknowns and hurdles to address,” the hospital said in a statement. The scans could only tell the team of specialist­s so much, and there were myriad problems that could crop up once the patient was opened up in the specially-formatted surgical room.

In two weeks, Andikyan’s team had developed plans for five lifethreat­ening scenarios.

“You don’t want to figure out steps on the fly,” he told The Post. “It’s a very difficult case, and time is of the essence if you’re in a critical situation.”

On surgery day, 25 different medical profession­als were ready to proceed with what they believed was the optimal plan. To minimise the number of surgeries and reduce complicati­ons, doctors planned to cut out the tumour, then immediatel­y perform an abdominal reconstruc­tion, removing extra skin stretched by the mass and giving the patient a normal-looking midsection.

Overseeing it all, Andikyan worried about the patient’s blood circulatio­n. The tumour rested on a major artery that pumped blood to the legs. The hospital placed a cardiothor­acic surgeon on standby in case things soured.

One complicati­on cropped up early: The patient’s blood pressure dropped, and had to be stabilised.

After that, the biggest task lay ahead of them: Removing 132 pounds of a viscous tumour.

Andikyan told The Post that the tumour originated in the epithelial cells lining the woman’s ovary. It’s called “mucinous” because the tumour cells produce a gelatinlik­e substance.

Most such tumours are benign, but pathologis­ts rushed to biopsy the cells and verified that it wasn’t cancerous.

It wasn’t. And doctors had more good news: They were able to save the woman’s uterus and one of her ovaries. She told doctors that she wants to have another child, and with her uterus intact, she’ll be able to do so. In fact, Andikyan said her outlook is excellent: The tumour was not malignant, all of it is gone, and there is not a large chance that it will come back.

After five hours, one of the biggest surgeries of Andikyan’s career was a success. And he could see the once-fearful woman who was wheeled into an examinatio­n room getting stronger every day.

“This patient was unable to walk,” he said. “We needed to involve physical therapists, but a few days after the surgery, she took her first steps.” — WPBloomber­g

 ??  ?? A woman’s ovarian mucinous tumour had ballooned to 132 pounds and stretched three feet across. — WP-Bloomberg photo
A woman’s ovarian mucinous tumour had ballooned to 132 pounds and stretched three feet across. — WP-Bloomberg photo

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