Total hysterectomy with bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy
This surgery is the one most commonly done to treat ovarian cancer. These are removed:
- Both of your ovaries
- Both of your fallopian tubes
- Your uterus
- Your cervix. This is the narrow end of the uterus that connects it to your vagina. If the cervix isn't removed, it's called a partial hysterectomy. If it's removed, it's a total hysterectomy.
Your surgeon may also remove your omentum. This is a fatty apron of tissue in the front of your belly (abdomen). Ovarian cancer often spreads to it. This surgery may be called an omentectomy.
Oophorectomy
In an oophorectomy, your surgeon takes out one or both of your ovaries. It depends on how likely it is that the cancer will spread. It may also depend on if you want to become pregnant in the future.
If the cancer has not spread to both ovaries, your surgeon may only take out one ovary and one fallopian tube. This is called unilateral salpingo-oophorectomy. It allows you to get pregnant in the future. Removing both ovaries and both fallopian tubes is called a bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy. You cannot become pregnant after this surgery.
Lymph node biopsy
One or more lymph nodes may be removed at the same time as a salpingo-oophorectomy. This may be done with or without a hysterectomy. These small glands are part of your immune system. They help your body fight infections. The body has many lymph nodes, so removing these nodes as part of the treatment for ovarian cancer has little effect on your immune system. Cancer often spreads to nearby lymph nodes. Those close to the ovaries are taken out and checked right away for signs of cancer.
Cytoreduction
During this surgery, your surgeon removes as much of the cancer as possible. This is also called debulking. This surgery may be done if the cancer has spread throughout your belly.
If you have this surgery and the cancer has spread to your colon, you may need to have part of your colon removed as well. Most of the time, the ends of your colon can be reattached. But you may need a colostomy. A colostomy means that the surgeon attaches a piece of your bowel to a hole (stoma) in your abdomen. Your stool will then drain into a pouch that sticks on the skin of your abdomen. This is done to let the reattached intestines heal. Later on, another surgery can usually be done to reverse it.
Sometimes other organs need to be partly or fully removed during cytoreduction. These can include your small intestine, appendix, stomach, spleen, bladder, liver, diaphragm, or ureter. Your surgeon will talk with you about this and how it might affect the way your body works.
Most people have cytoreductive surgery done first to remove as much of the tumor as possible. Then they get chemotherapy. But debulking can also be done after chemotherapy. When chemotherapy is given before surgery, it's called neoadjuvant chemotherapy . This might be done for people with a lot of cancer, tumors that would be hard to remove, older people, and those with other health issues. Neoadjuvant chemotherapy is used to shrink the tumor. After that, surgery may be done to remove as much of the cancer as possible and may allow a simpler procedure to be performed. Then more chemotherapy might be given later.