Abstract
A 51-year-old female patient presented with abdominal distension. Computed tomography revealed a right ovarian tumor suspicious for clinical stage IC ovarian cancer, along with a considerable inferior vena cava (IVC) thrombus extending to the Th2 level, accompanied by a deep vein thrombus and a peripheral left pulmonary embolism (PE). Preoperative IVC filter placement was deemed unfavorable due to the short distance between the renal vein and the thrombus. On the second day of hospitalization, ovarian tumor extraction, thrombectomy, and IVC filter placement were performed. Pathology of the excised tumor revealed endometrioid carcinoma. Postoperatively, anticoagulation therapy with edoxaban 30 mg/day resulted in improvement of the deep vein thrombus and PE. The concomitant adnexal resection and thrombectomy rendered the safe placement of an IVC filter feasible despite the preoperative placement being unfeasible. Open thrombectomy remains a valid treatment strategy despite advances in endovascular therapy.