Extended surgical staging for potentially resectable malignant pleural mesothelioma
Extended surgical staging for potentially resectable malignant pleural mesothelioma
SOURCE: Ann Thorac Surg. 2005 Dec;80(6):1988-92.
Rice DC, Erasmus JJ, Stevens CW, Vaporciyan AA, Wu JS, Tsao AS, Walsh GL, Swisher SG, Hofstetter WL, Ordonez NG, Smythe WR.
Department of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, The University
of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas 77030, USA.
BACKGROUND: Extrapleural pneumonectomy for malignant pleural
mesothelioma (MPM) is a high-risk procedure, and patients require
careful preoperative staging to exclude advanced disease. Computed
tomography, magnetic resonance imaging, and positron emission tomography
are useful staging modalities, but do not reliably identify
contralateral mediastinal involvement or transdiaphragmatic invasion. We
evaluated the role of extended surgical staging procedures, which
generally includes a combination of laparoscopy, peritoneal lavage, and
mediastinoscopy, to more precisely stage patients with MPM.
METHODS: One hundred eighteen patients with MPM, deemed
clinically and radiologically resectable, underwent extended surgical
staging. Mediastinoscopy was performed in 111 patients, laparoscopy in
109 patients, and peritoneal lavage in 78 patients.
RESULTS: Ten (9.2%) patients had gross evidence of
transdiaphragmatic or peritoneal involvement. Peritoneal lavage was
positive for metastatic MPM in 2 (2.6%) patients, neither of whom had
obvious transdiaphragmatic invasion. Ipsilateral mediastinal nodes
contained metastatic tumor in 10 of 62 (16.1%) patients. Contralateral
nodes were positive in 4 of 111 (3.6%) patients. Of the patients who
underwent biopsy of both ipsilateral and contralateral mediastinal
nodes, and who had complete pathologic staging after extrapleural
pneumonectomy (n = 46), 14 (30.4%) had N2-positive nodes. Only 5 of
these patients were correctly identified by mediastinoscopy (sensitivity
36%, accuracy 80%). Extended surgical staging identified 16 (13.6%)
patients who had contralateral nodal involvement, transdiaphragmatic
invasion, or positive peritoneal cytology.
CONCLUSIONS: Extended surgical staging defines an important
subset of patients with unresectable MPM not identified by imaging.
Because of the potential morbidity associated with extrapleural
pneumonectomy, we advocate that extended surgical staging be performed
in all patients with MPM before resection.
0 comments:
Post a Comment