Overview of the role of imaging in Pelvic exenteration

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Abstract

Pelvic exenteration is a radical surgery that is used in an attempt to cure patients with locally advanced central pelvic malignancies. Exenteration is a salvage operation that is considered only after other therapies, such as chemoradiation, have been exhausted. The high morbidity from exenteration’s multiorgan resection warrants careful patient selection. Preoperative imaging plays a major role in the selection process, allowing the exclusion of patients with unresectable pelvic disease or distant metastases. Imaging is also crucial to surgical planning, providing the surgeon with a map of the distribution and extent of the pelvic disease.

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Sagebiel, T. L., Viswanathan, C., Patnana, M., Devine, C. E., Frumovitz, M., & Bhosale, P. R. (2015). Overview of the role of imaging in Pelvic exenteration. Radiographics, 35(4), 1286–1294. https://doi.org/10.1148/rg.2015140127

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