Palliative Surgery - Comfort & Care
- Goal: Alleviate symptoms, improve Quality of Life (QoL), not curative. Manages complications of advanced cancer.
- Focus: Symptom control (pain, obstruction, bleeding, fungation).
- Indications:
- Unresectable tumors causing severe symptoms.
- Metastatic disease with localized problems.
- Impending complications (e.g., pathological fracture).
- Key Considerations:
- Patient's overall condition & life expectancy (typically > 2-3 months).
- Patient wishes & realistic goals.
- Minimally invasive options preferred when possible.
- Common Procedures:
- GI Obstruction: Stenting, bypass, diverting stoma.
- Bleeding: Ligation, embolization, palliative resection.
- Pain: Debulking, neurolysis.
- Fungating Wounds: Toilet mastectomy, debridement.
- Pathological Fractures: Internal fixation.
ā Palliative surgery aims to improve the patient's remaining life, focusing on symptom relief even when cure is not possible. The "benefit vs. burden" ratio is crucial.
Symptom Management - Surgical Toolkit
- Pain Management:
- Neuroablative: Celiac plexus block (pancreatic ca), cordotomy (unilateral pain).
- Debulking: For nerve compression.
- Bone Stabilization: Vertebroplasty/Kyphoplasty (vertebral mets); prophylactic fixation.
- Obstruction Relief:
- Gastrointestinal (GI):
- Stenting: Self-expanding metallic stents (SEMS) (esophageal, gastroduodenal, colonic).
- Bypass: Gastrojejunostomy (GOO), enteroenterostomy (SBO).
- Stoma: Colostomy/ileostomy (distal obstruction).
- Tubes: Percutaneous Endoscopic Gastrostomy (PEG)/Jejunostomy (venting/feeding).
- Biliary Tract:
- Stenting: ERCP/PTC (plastic/metallic) for jaundice.
- Drainage: Percutaneous Transhepatic Biliary Drainage (PTBD) (external/internal-external).
- Bypass: Choledochojejunostomy (if stenting fails).
- Genitourinary (GU):
- Stenting: JJ stent (ureteric).
- Drainage: Percutaneous nephrostomy (PCN) (supravesical obstruction).
- Gastrointestinal (GI):
- Bleeding Control:
- Endoscopic: Argon plasma coagulation (APC), clips, injection (GI bleed).
- Angioembolization: For visceral/tumor bleed.
- Surgical: Palliative resection/ligation.
- Fungating Wounds:
- Debridement: Necrotic tissue, odor, infection control.
- Palliative excision: Localized, distressing lesions (e.g., toilet mastectomy).
- Pathological Fractures:
- Internal Fixation: ORIF (plates, nails).
- Joint Replacement: Hemiarthroplasty (e.g., hip).
- Cementoplasty: Polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) injection.
- Malignant Effusions/Ascites:
- Drainage: Paracentesis, thoracentesis.
- Indwelling Catheters: PleurX, Aspira (self-drainage).
- Pleurodesis: Talc/doxycycline (pleural).
- Pericardial Window: For recurrent pericardial effusion.
ā For malignant gastric outlet obstruction, endoscopic stenting offers faster relief and shorter hospital stay vs. surgical gastrojejunostomy in palliative settings.
Special Cases & Support - Holistic View
- Malignant Bowel Obstruction (MBO):
- Surgical: Stenting, bypass, colostomy/ileostomy, venting gastrostomy.
- Medical: Octreotide, antiemetics, analgesics.
- Pathological Fractures:
- Prophylactic fixation if Mirels' score >8.
- Surgical options: Internal fixation, arthroplasty, cementoplasty.
- Spinal Cord Compression:
- Emergency: High-dose steroids (e.g., Dexamethasone 16mg IV), urgent radiotherapy, surgical decompression.
- Bleeding/Fungating Tumors:
- Control bleeding: Radiotherapy, embolization, topical agents, surgical ligation/debulking.
- Malignant Effusions (Pleural, Ascites):
- Drainage (thoracentesis, paracentesis), pleurodesis, indwelling catheters, shunts.
- Holistic Care:
- Multidisciplinary Team (MDT) essential: Surgeons, oncologists, palliative care specialists.
- Comprehensive symptom control: Pain (WHO ladder), nausea, dyspnea.
- Nutritional, psychosocial, spiritual support.
- Advance care planning.

ā Mirels' scoring system (assessing site, pain, lesion type, size) predicts pathological fracture risk; a score >8 often indicates need for prophylactic fixation.
HighāYield Points - ā” Biggest Takeaways
- Palliative surgery aims for symptom relief (e.g., pain, obstruction) and QoL improvement, not cure.
- Patient selection is critical: assess performance status, life expectancy, and patient wishes.
- Common interventions: Symptomatic debulking, bypass procedures, stenting, pleurodesis, fracture fixation.
- Prefer minimally invasive surgery (MIS) to reduce morbidity and shorten recovery.
- A multidisciplinary team (MDT) approach is essential for comprehensive care.
- Ethical considerations and shared decision-making are paramount.
- Early palliative interventions can significantly improve patient comfort and function.
Continue reading on Oncourse
Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.
CONTINUE READING ā FREEor get the app