{"paper_id":"1f98cdc8-6de1-4072-a840-52583c8d186d","body_text":"Cytoreductive surgery (CRS) with hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) in malignant peritoneal mesothelioma (MPM).\nAbstract\n816\nBackground: MPM is a rare malignancy, with roughly 300 new cases in the United States annually. CRS-HIPEC has evolved as an important treatment nodality with demonstrated survival benefit. We studied the outcomes of MPM with CRS-HIPEC at a single institution. Methods: We studied a retrospective cohort of patients with malignant peritoneal mesothelioma who underwent CRS–HIPEC at Roswell Park from 2001 to 2023. Overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS) were estimated from diagnosis to describe the cohort, with one- and five-year rates calculated. Associations between HIPEC agent and OS/PFS were tested using Cox proportional hazards models with time 0 at CRS-HIPEC. Models adjusted for baseline characteristics, including age (y), sex, synchronous cancer, normal platelet count, prior therapy, completeness of cytoreduction (CC≤1), and time from diagnosis to CRS–HIPEC. Results: Thirty-nine patients were included (16 men, 23 women). Median age at diagnosis was 59y (19–79) with women being slightly younger (58 vs 62.5y). Among females, 6 were diagnosed at age < 50y, 9 underwent hysterectomy/salpingectomy/oophorectomy during work-up/management of MPM prior to CRS-HIPEC, occasionally with synchronous endometrial ca (2) or endometriosis (2) and 1 patient was diagnosed as part of infertility workup. Genomic testing was available for 9 cases (HER2 overexpression, alterations in BAP1, TP53, TERT, SETD2). Twenty-seven received mitomycin C and 12 received carboplatin. Three patients underwent repeat CRS–HIPEC. Baseline features were similar except for CC≤1. CC ≤ 1 was attained in 21 patients, not achieved in 11 patients and unknown in 7 patients. Synchronous cancer occurred in 8 patients. Histology was epithelioid in 23, unspecified in 8, Well-differentiated papillary in 5, biphasic in 2, and multicystic in 1. Twelve received prior therapy in the form of systemic therapy (8) or CRS without HIPEC (4). Median OS (from diagnosis) was not reached. 1- and 5-year OS were 92.3% and 76.9%. Median PFS (from diagnosis) was 986 days. 1- and 5-year PFS were 76.9% and 38.2%. Carboplatin was associated with more favorable OS (HR=0.37, 95%CI: 0.04-3.46) and PFS (HR=0.56, 95%CI: 0.16-1.91) in adjusted models (from HIPEC). Female sex and younger age predicted better OS and PFS. Absence of synchronous cancer, and normal platelet count at diagnosis were also associated with better PFS. Conclusions: In this cohort of MPM, CRS-HIPEC was associated with favorable outcomes, with patients occasionally eligible for repeat CRS-HIPEC. Although not statistically significant, our study demonstrated a trend towards improved OS and PFS with carboplatin. Female sex was independently associated with improved OS, despite concurrent endometrial cancers or endometriosis. Several clinical factors predicted PFS.\nFormats available\nYou can view the full content in the following formats:\nInformation & Authors\nInformation\nPublished In\nCopyright\n© 2026 by American Society of Clinical Oncology.\nHistory\nPublished in print: January 10, 2026\nPublished online: January 12, 2026\nAuthors\nFunding Information\nNone.\nMetrics & Citations\nMetrics\nAltmetric\nCitations\nArticle Citation\nCytoreductive surgery (CRS) with hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) in malignant peritoneal mesothelioma (MPM).. J Clin Oncol 44, 816-816(2026).\nDownload Citation\nIf you have the appropriate software installed, you can download article citation data to the citation manager of your choice. Simply select your manager software from the list below and click Download.\nFor more information or tips please see 'Downloading to a citation manager' in the Help menu.\nDownload article citation data for:\nVaishali Deenadayalan, Yongdong Ouyang, Mrinalini Ramesh, Kannan Thanikachalam\nJournal of Clinical Oncology 2026 44:2_suppl, 816-816\nVaishali Deenadayalan, Yongdong Ouyang, Mrinalini Ramesh, Kannan Thanikachalam\nJournal of Clinical Oncology 2026 44:2_suppl, 816-816\nView Options\nView options\nLogin options\nCheck and see if you have full access through your login credentials or institution. ASCO membership or a journal subscription may be required to download the PDF version of this article.\nPersonal login Institutional Login","source_license":"CC0","license_restricted":false}