Scar Decompression in Managing Breast Cancer-Related Lymphedema: Is it Needed?

IF 2.2 3区 医学 Q2 SURGERY
Emily R Finkelstein, Dylan Treger, Aziz Shittu, Kyle Y Xu, Juan Mella-Catinchi
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background:  Mastectomy, axillary lymph node dissection, and irradiation for breast cancer commonly result in perivascular and axillary scarring. This scarring is thought to cause functional venous stenosis that leads to downstream venous hypertension in the affected extremity. Standard surgical practice is to decompress perivascular scarring at the time of physiologic lymphedema surgery in patients with breast cancer-related lymphedema (BCRL). However, it is unknown whether this scar release influences surgical outcomes. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the prevalence of functional venous stenosis in patients with BCRL and determine whether scar decompression is a necessary step in physiologic lymphedema surgery.

Methods:  The authors conducted a retrospective review of 64 patients with unilateral BCRL that presented to our lymphedema center between January 2020 and October 2022. Radiologist reports of venous duplex ultrasound for the bilateral upper extremities identified any disturbances in venous flow or indications of venous stenosis.

Results:  Of the 64 patients with BCRL, 78% (n = 50) had prior axillary lymph node dissection. Forty-seven (73%) patients completed ultrasound imaging, of which, one patient (2%) had venous stenosis in the affected lymphedematous extremity identified on duplex ultrasound that may have suggested functional scarring. Vascularized lymph node transfer (VLNT) without scar decompression was performed in six patients (9%). Average preoperative Lymphedema Life Impact Scale and Lymphedema Index scores were 35 and 19 units, with a mean decrease of 23 (67%) and 6 (30%) units postoperatively.

Conclusion:  Most patients with BCRL did not have identifiable functional venous stenosis on duplex ultrasound, apart from one patient with suspected postthrombotic changes. All six patients that received VLNT without scar decompression had a successful outcome with decreased measures of lymphedema postoperatively. Scar decompression may therefore be unnecessary in physiologic lymphedema surgery, reducing operative times and avoiding risk of injury to neurovascular structures of the axilla.

治疗乳腺癌相关淋巴水肿的疤痕减压术:需要吗?
背景:乳腺癌的乳房切除术、腋窝淋巴结清扫术和放射治疗通常会造成血管周围和腋窝瘢痕。这种瘢痕被认为会造成功能性静脉狭窄,导致患肢下游静脉高压。标准的手术方法是在对乳腺癌相关淋巴水肿(BCRL)患者进行生理性淋巴水肿手术时对血管周围瘢痕进行减压。然而,这种瘢痕松解是否会影响手术效果尚不得而知。本研究旨在评估乳腺癌相关淋巴水肿(BCRL)患者功能性静脉狭窄的患病率,并确定瘢痕减压是否是生理性淋巴水肿手术的必要步骤:作者对2020年1月至2022年10月期间到我们淋巴水肿中心就诊的64例单侧BCRL患者进行了回顾性研究。放射科医生对双侧上肢的静脉双相超声检查报告确定了静脉血流的紊乱或静脉狭窄的迹象:在 64 名 BCRL 患者中,78%(n=50)曾进行过腋窝淋巴结清扫术。47名患者(73%)完成了超声成像,其中1名患者(2%)在双相超声检查中发现患侧淋巴结肢体有静脉狭窄,可能提示有功能性瘢痕。有六名患者(9%)在未进行疤痕减压的情况下进行了血管化淋巴结转移(VLNT)。术前淋巴水肿生活影响量表(LLIS)和L-dex平均评分分别为35和19个单位,术后分别平均降低了23(67%)和6(30%)个单位:除了一名疑似血栓后病变的患者外,大多数 BCRL 患者在双工超声检查中均未发现功能性静脉狭窄。所有接受 VLNT 而未进行疤痕减压的六名患者均取得了成功,术后淋巴水肿症状减轻。因此,生理性淋巴水肿手术中可能不需要瘢痕减压,从而缩短了手术时间,避免了损伤腋窝神经血管结构的风险。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
28.60%
发文量
80
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: The Journal of Reconstructive Microsurgery is a peer-reviewed, indexed journal that provides an international forum for the publication of articles focusing on reconstructive microsurgery and complex reconstructive surgery. The journal was originally established in 1984 for the microsurgical community to publish and share academic papers. The Journal of Reconstructive Microsurgery provides the latest in original research spanning basic laboratory, translational, and clinical investigations. Review papers cover current topics in complex reconstruction and microsurgery. In addition, special sections discuss new technologies, innovations, materials, and significant problem cases. The journal welcomes controversial topics, editorial comments, book reviews, and letters to the Editor, in order to complete the balanced spectrum of information available in the Journal of Reconstructive Microsurgery. All articles undergo stringent peer review by international experts in the specialty.
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