| Literature DB >> 21559270 |
Abdullah Jibawi1, Islam Ahmed, Karim El-Sakka, Syed Waquar Yusuf.
Abstract
Background. The coexistence of neoplasm and abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) presents a real management challenge. This paper reviews the literature on the prevalence, diagnosis, and management dilemmas of concurrent visceral malignancy and abdominal aortic aneurysm. Method. The MEDLINE and HIGHWIRE databases (1966-present) were searched. Papers detailing relevant data were assessed for quality and validity. All case series, review articles, and references of such articles were searched for additional relevant papers. Results. Current challenges in decision making, the effect of major body-cavity surgery on an untreated aneurysm, the effects of major vascular surgery on the treatment of malignancy, the use of EVAR (endovascular aortic aneurysm repair) as a fairly low-risk procedure and its role in the management of malignancy, and the effect of other challenging issues such as the use of adjuvant therapy, and patients informed decision-making were reviewed and discussed. Conclusion. In synchronous malignancy and abdominal aortic aneurysm, the most life-threatening lesion should be addressed first. Endovascular aneurysm repair where possible, followed by malignancy resection, is becoming the preferred initial treatment choice in most centres.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21559270 PMCID: PMC3087962 DOI: 10.4061/2011/516146
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cardiol Res Pract ISSN: 2090-0597 Impact factor: 1.866
Prevalence of aortic aneurysm and concomitant malignancy.
| Source | AAA | Malignant disease | Colorectal cancer | Observation period, yr |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Szilagyi et al.,1967 [ | 803 | 31 (3.9) | 9 (1.2) | 22 |
| Nora et al., 1989 [ | 3500 | NA (the emphasis is on CRC) | 17 (0.5) (those underwent operations for Ca and AAA) | 12 |
| Morris and Colquitt, 1988 [ | 158 (looking at all but with histologically proven ca) | 20 (12.7) | 6 (3.8) | 12 |
| Tennant 1990 [ | 247 | 4 (1.6) | 0 | 5 |
| Oshodi et al., 2000 [ | 676 | 8 (1.2) | 4 (0.6) | 20 |
| Tsuji et al., 1999 [ | 162 | 4 (2.5) | 1 (0.6) | 10 |
| Matsumoto et al., 2002 [ | 260 | 29 (11.2) | 16 (6.2) | 14 |
| Baxter et al., 2002 [ | 10 872 | NA | 83 (0.8) | 15 |
| Yamamoto et al. [ | 408 (using FOB to detect CRC) | — | 6 (1.5%) with cancer and 16 (3.9) with polyps | — |
| Onohara et al. [ | 112 | 16 (14%) | — | — |
*This study was performed in the pre CT/Duplex era and therefore unlikely to detect cancer. AAA: abdominal aortic aneurysm. CRC: colorectal cancer. NA: not applicable. FOB: faecal occult blood.
Examples of clinical presentation of aortic aneurysm and/or associated malignancy.
| Source | Setting | No. of cases | Mode of presentation* |
|---|---|---|---|
| Upchurch and Clair [ | Cancer in aortic aneurysm case | 1 case | Ruptured AAA associated with aortocaval fistula was complicated by C. Septicum sepsis. CRC was suspected and found on investigations. |
| Tsui, et al. [ | Cancer in aortic aneurysm case | 1 case | Haemoptysis in TAA was initially related to the aneurysm. Lung cancer was suspected thereafter and found. |
| Van Doorn et al. [ | Aortic aneurysm in cancer case | 1 case | Sepsis and widened mediastinum developed after CRC operation. Thoracic aneurysm was suspected and found. |
| Mohamed et al. [ | Aortic aneurysm in cancer case | 1 case | CT scan in a patient with sepsis and abdominal pain revealed ruptured aorta with pseudoaneurysm. Repeated CT scan in another centre found CRC in pelvis. |
| Sebastian et al. [ | Cancer in Aortic aneurysm case | 1 case | Unsettled dysphagia in TAA was investigated further. Oesophageal cancer was found. |
| Reference (first author) | Type of cancer | No. of cases | Group | Approach | AAA rupture rate (period) | Interval between AA repair and cancer treatment | Delay in cancer treatment | Cancer outcome | Graft complication rate | % mortality rate (mode) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CRC | 83 (of 435 AAA pts over 8 yrs) | One: 44pts | CRC treated first. AAA average size 3.8 cm | 1/44 ruptured (7yrs later) 1/44 died of sepsis following repair of AAA (1 yr later) | 4 days | 13% recurrence | 4.5% (30 d) | |||
| Baxter et al. [ | Two: 20pts | CRC treated first. AAA average size 5.4 cm | 2/20 (10%) had rAAA postoperatively. 1 died | 8 days | 33% recurrence | 10% (30 d) | ||||
| Three: 12pts | AAA and CRC treated simultaneously. AAA average size 6.4 cm | 0% | 15 days | 17% recurrence | 14% (30 d) | |||||
| Four: 7pts | AAA treated first. AAA average size 6 cm | 0% | 122 days | 9% recurrence | 8% (30 d) | |||||
| Different types | 25 | One: 11 | EVAR performed first. AAA average size 5.9 cm | 6.5 days (average) | 2/11 graft occlusion—0/11 infection | 0% (periop) | ||||
| Porcellini et al. [ | Two: 7 | Open surgery performed first. AAA average size 6.8 cm | 0 | 34 days | 3 died of mets (11, 15, and 39 mo) | 1/14 graft infection | 3/14 died after AAA repair | |||
| Three: 6 | One-stage operation | 0 | 0 | 1 died of mets (15 mo) | 0% | |||||
| Four: 1 | Cancer first | 1 | 82 d | alive (55 mo) | 0 | 0% | ||||
| CRC | 7 | Open: 5 | AAA and CRC treated simultaneously. AAA average size? | 0 | NS | NS | 0% | |||
| Herald et al. [ | EVAR: 1 | AAA and CRC treated simultaneously. AAA average size NS | 0 | 0 | NS | Alive (12 months) | 0% | |||
| EVAR: 1 | AAA before the CRC. AAA average size NS | 0 | 14 | NS | Alive (6 months) | 0% | ||||
| Chai et al. [ | CRC | 2 | EVAR followed by CRC resection | 0 | 7 | NS | Alive (12 months) | 100% (graft occlusion). Case report type | ||
| Sheen et al. [ | Pancreas | 1 | EVAR followed by pancreatectomy | 0 | 9 | NS | Alive (1 month) | 0% | ||
| Renal | 27 | 11 | One stage | 0 | 0 | 80% survival | 0 (57months) | |||
| Hafez et al. [ | 13 | AAA first | 0 | ? | 35% survival | 0 (57months) | ||||
| 3 | Renal malignancy first | 0 | ? | 80% survival | 0 (57months) | |||||
| different grouping | ||||||||||
| Matsumoto | Gastric and | 25 (out of 186 AAA repairs) - high risk pts only included | Group 1: 14 | One-stage operation | 0 | NA | 2 died of renal failure (10 mo) or mets (2yrs) | NA | 0 | |
| Group 2: 11 | Two-stage operation | 0 | NA | 1 died of Mi (3 mo) | NA | 0 | ||||
| CRC | 108 | Group 1: 46 | CRC treated first. AAA second: group A: 35 open/group B: 11 EVAR | A: 42 d/B: 35 | 2/11 (Group B) had sigmoid ischaemia | |||||
| Lin et al. [ | Group 2: 38 | AAA first: Group C: 26 open/Group D: 12 EVAR | C: 115/D: 12 | Significant periop morbidity/mortality in Group C | ||||||
| Group 3: 8 | Combined | |||||||||
| All (mostly CRC) | 7 (127 AAAs) | Group 1: 3 | One stage | 0% | ||||||
| Suffat et al. [ | Group 2: 1 | Two stage (?) | 0% | |||||||
| Group 3: 3 | EVAR | Few days | 0% | |||||||
| gastric | 6 (222 AAAs) | Group 1: 3 | CRC first (advanced cancer) | 71% alive at 4 yrs | ||||||
| Komori et al. [ | Grorp 2: 1 | AAA first (>6 cm) | ||||||||
| Group 3: 2 | One stage | |||||||||
| CRC | 13 | Group 1: 10 | CRC first; Open AAA (3) or EVAR (7) second | 0 | 0 | |||||
| Shalhoub et al. [ | Group 2: 2 | AAA first (diameter 7&8 cm) | 0 | 0 | ||||||
| Group 3: 1 | 0 | 0 | ||||||||
| Oshodi et al. [ | All | 56 (676) | One-stage open surgery | 3 deaths/7 early reoperation | 0 | 0 | 0 | |||
| Galt et al. [ | renal | 10 | One stage | 0 | 0 | NS | 1 died from mets | 0 | ||
| Veraldi et al. [ | CRC | 14 | Group 1: 9 | One stage | 0 | 0 | NA | 0 (up to 5yrs) | 0 | |
| Group 2: 7 | Two stage | 0 | 31 d | NA | ||||||
*AAA: abdominal aortic aneurysm. CRC: colorectal cancer. GI: Gastrointestinal. NS: not specified. NA: not applicable/not provided. EVAR: endovascular aneurysm repair.