Hepatic involvement in recurrent ovarian cancer has historically been considered a relative contraindication to cytoreductive surgery. Advances in hepatobiliary surgery and multidisciplinary collaboration have expanded the role of liver resection ( Farges et al., 2012 , Fong et al., 2005 , Hiatt et al., 1994 , Curley and Glazer, 2025 . This video demonstrates the technical considerations and feasibility of hepatic resection during secondary cytoreductive surgery for ovarian cancer. A 61-year-old woman with early-stage ovarian cancer and a long disease-free interval developed an isolated hepatic recurrence. Imaging revealed a centrally necrotic mass in the right hepatic lobe with contiguous involvement of the right adrenal gland. Biopsy confirmed metastatic high-grade Müllerian carcinoma. Following systemic chemotherapy with radiographic response, the patient was selected for secondary cytoreductive surgery. The procedure included partial hepatectomy of segments V and VI with en bloc right adrenalectomy and cholecystectomy. Small-volume pelvic disease was removed via low anterior rectal resection, achieving complete gross tumor resection. The video highlights hepatic mobilization, identification of key anatomic landmarks including the hepatoduodenal ligament, Glissonian pedicles, and hepatic venous structures, and parenchymal transection using the clamp-crush technique with vascular control via the Pringle maneuver. Intraoperative ultrasound confirmed vascular anatomy and perfusion of the remnant liver. OutcomeEstimated blood loss was 450 mL with a Pringle time of 25 min. Pathology confirmed metastatic high-grade Müllerian adenocarcinoma with negative hepatic margins. The patient was discharged on postoperative day ten without major postoperative complications. Hepatic resection during secondary cytoreductive surgery for ovarian cancer is safe and feasible in carefully selected patients when performed by experienced multidisciplinary teams with detailed knowledge of hepatic anatomy.
Harlev et al. (Wed,) studied this question.