| Literature DB >> 26579526 |
Charles M Malata1, Nicholas G Rabey2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The deep inferior epigastric artery perforator free flap is the gold standard for autologous breast reconstruction. However, using a single vascular pedicle may not yield sufficient tissue in patients with midline scars or insufficient lower abdominal pannus. Double-pedicled free flaps overcome this problem using different vascular arrangements to harvest the entire lower abdominal flap. The literature is, however, sparse regarding technique selection. We therefore reviewed our experience in order to formulate an algorithm and comprehensive classification for this purpose.Entities:
Keywords: Bipedicled free flaps; DIEP and SIEA breast free flaps; abdominal free flaps; breast reconstruction; double-pedicle free flaps; intra-flap and extra-flap microvascular anastomoses; rib sparing internal mammary vessel exposure; stacked free flaps
Year: 2015 PMID: 26579526 PMCID: PMC4620682 DOI: 10.3389/fsurg.2015.00049
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Surg ISSN: 2296-875X
Published reports on the abdominal bipedicled flap for breast reconstruction.
| Study | Number of cases | Indications | Flap tissue arrangement | Vascular arrangements | Complications |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ( | 1 | Midline abdominal scar | Single layer | Primary DIEA to IMV | Nil |
| ( | 1 | Large contralateral breast, midline abdominal scar | Stacked | Primary DIEA to subscapular artery | Re-exploration needing vein anastomosis and graft |
| ( | 16 | Previous liposuction (19%), abdominal scars (31%), insufficient tissue volume (50%) | Single layer, folded if required | DIEA/DIEA flaps (43.8%) | • Scar correction (25%) |
| ( | 1 | Midline abdominal scar | Stacked | Primary: DIEA to TDA | Nil |
| ( | 14 | Thin abdominal wall (21%), large contralateral breast (C cup or above 57%) | Single layer | DIEA/DIEA (42.9%) | • Cellulitis (7%) |
| ( | 5 | Infraumbilical vertical abdominal scar (100%) | Single layer | Primary DIEA pedicle to IMV. Secondary DIEA pedicle to superior continuity of primary pedicle | Minor fat necrosis (40%) |
| ( | 96 | Previous abdominal scars (31.9%) including midline abdominal scars (25.7%) | Single layer | All used IMVs for primary DIEA pedicle anastomoses. For secondary DIEA pedicle | • Total Flap Loss – 1.8% |
| ( | 1 | Large contralateral breast | Folded | DIEA/DIEA to IMV extra-flap anterograde/retrograde. | Nil |
| ( | 55 | Insufficient abdominal volume | Folded and stacked | Primary DIEA pedicle (superficial) to IMVs, secondary DIEA pedicle (deep) intra-flap anastomosis to primary pedicle | Hematoma (5.4%) |
Bipedicled abdominal free flap patient summary.
| Case no. | Age | BMI | Cup size | Immediate (I)/delayed (D) | Flap configuration | Ischemia duration (min) | Surgery duration (min) | Rib space width (mm) | Adjuvant postoperative radiotherapy | Complications |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 26 | 24.9 | 34B/C | I | DIEA/DIEA extraflap | 104 | 770 | 14.5 | No | |
| 2 | 43 | 23.4 | 34B/C | I | III b | 98 | 744 | 20 | Yes | |
| 3 | 38 | 23.1 | 32A/B | I | II b | 83 | 780 | 24 | Yes | Requested liposuction |
| 4 | 45 | 26 | 36B | I | III a | 91 | 690 | 19 | Yes | |
| 5 | 51 | 25.3 | 34C | I | DIEA/DIEA extraflap | 90 | 600 | 26 | No | |
| 6 | 43 | 24 | 36B/C | Salvage | III a | 110 | 790 | 21 | No | |
| 7 | 43 | 24.7 | 34D | I | DIEA/DIEA extraflap | 65 | 600 | 26 | No | |
| 8 | 46 | 20.2 | 36C | I | II b | 115 | 748 | 27 | No | Requested liposuction |
| 9 | 50 | 22.8 | 34B/C | I | DIEA/DIEA extraflap | 81 | 716 | 15 | No | |
| 10 | 42 | 22.9 | 36D | I | II a | 82 | 690 | 15 | Yes | Small area fat necrosis |
| 11 | 47 | 20.3 | 34C | I | III a | 190 | 675 | 16 | Yes | Requested liposuction |
| 12 | 40 | 22.5 | 36B | I | DIEA/DIEA extraflap | 76 | 654 | 19 | Yes | Abdominal wound dehiscence |
| 13 | 46 | 23.9 | 36B | I | DIEA/DIEA extraflap | 125 | 650 | 23 | Yes | |
| 14 | 44 | 21.3 | 32D | I | III b | 101 | 554 | 20 | Yes | |
| 15 | 54 | 23.9 | 32D | I | DIEA/DIEA extraflap | 106 | 572 | 26 | Yes | |
| 16 | 53 | 23.4 | 34D | I | DIEA/DIEA extraflap | 130 | 647 | 26 | No | |
| 17 | 53 | 25.2 | 32G | I | DIEP-DIEA extraflap | 157 | 554 | 17 | Yes | |
| 18 | 46 | 23 | 32E | I | SIEA/SIEA extraflap | 118 | 622 | 20 | Yes | |
| 19 | 34 | 18.7 | 34D | I | DIEP–DIEP extraflap | 129 | 693 | 14 | Yes | |
| 20 | 48 | 28.8 | 34E | Delayed | II b | 55 | 535 | 14 | Yes. Pre-op | |
| 21 | 50 | 26.2 | 32D | I | DIEA–DIEA extraflap | 87 | 670 | 24 | No | |
| 22 | 45 | 24.3 | 36AA | Delayed | DIEA–DIEA extraflap | 107 | 582 | 22 | Yes | |
| 23 | 48 | 25 | 32G | I | DIEA–DIEA extraflap | 182 | 691 | 18 | No | |
| 24 | 49 | 23.5 | 36C | I | DIEP–SIEA extraflap | 92 | 702 | 19 | No | |
| 25 | 26 | 26 | 36C | Salvage | DIEP–DIEP extraflap | 60 | 468 | 22 | Yes. Pre-op |
Figure 1Preoperative (A–C) and postoperative (D–F) appearances of a 26-year-old patient with size D cup breasts. She received an extraflap configuration DIEP–DIEP bipedicled free flap breast reconstruction.
Figure 3Preoperative (A–C) and two-year postoperative (D–F) and post-radiation appearances of a 46-year-old nulliparous patient with large breasts (size E cup) and a relatively small abdomen. She underwent a Type 1 SIEA-SIEA double-pedicled free flap breast reconstruction at the time of her therapeutic mastectomy. She has hitherto declined nipple reconstruction.
Summary of the vessel constructs used in this bipedicled abdominal free flap series.
| Name of construct | DIEP/DIEP | DIEP/SIEA | SIEA/SIEA |
|---|---|---|---|
| Inferior continuity | 2 | 2 | – |
| Superior continuity | 2 | 2 | – |
| Extraflap anastomoses | 15 | 1 | 1 |
| Totals | 19 | 5 | 1 |
Figure 4An intraoperative photograph of a bipedicled DIEP–DIEP flap after harvest prior to micro-anastomoses. Each hemiflap is based on two perforators.
Figure 2Preoperative (A–C) and postoperative (D–F) appearances of a 43-year-old nulliparous patient with size B cup breasts who required postoperative radiotherapy and refused to countenance the idea of an implant-based reconstruction. She underwent a Type IIIb DIEP–DIEP bipedicled flap reconstruction.
Figure 5An intraoperative photograph of a DIEP–SIEA showing the ease of anastomoses of the SIEA second pedicle to the superior continuity of the DIEP primary vascular pedicle.
Summary of recipients used for venous and arterial anastomoses for the secondary flap.
| Recipient vessels | Venous number (%) | Arterial number (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Retrograde IM vessel | 11 (44) | 16 (64) |
| Anterograde IM vessel | 6 (24) | 0 (0) |
| Superior pedicle continuity | 5 (20) | 5 (20) |
| Inferior pedicle continuity | 3 (12) | 3 (12) |
| Thoracodorsal vessel | 1 (4) | 1 (4) |
| Intercostal perforator | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
| Pectoral vein | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
Figure 6Flow chart depicting the options in free flap vascular pedicle design for bipedicled microvascular flap anastomoses.
Figure 7Comprehensive classification of the variations for intraflap anastomoses in bipedicled abdominal free flaps (modified after Hamdi et al.).
Figure 8Flow chart depicting the steps in decision making for the configuration of the flap vessels in abdominal double-pedicled free flap microvascular anastomoses.
Figure 9Flow chart depicting the steps in decision making for determining the configuration of the recipient vessels in abdominal double-pedicled free flap microvascular anastomoses.
Figure 10Intraoperative example of extraflap DIEA–DIEA anastomoses to the internal mammary vessels using two anterograde veins (V1 and V2) both with venous couplers, one antegrade artery (A1) and one retrograde artery (A2).
The Malata–Rabey comprehensive classification of double pedicled abdominal free flap anastomoses.
| A. Intraflap anastomoses |
|---|
| a. Inferior continuity |
| b. |
| c. |
| a. Inferior continuity |
| b. Superior continuity |
| c. |
| a. |
| b. |
| c. |
| a. |
| b. |
| B. Extra-flap anastomoses |
| a. Flap 1 (both vessels antegrade); Flap 2 (artery retrograde, vein antegrade to second vc) |
| b. Flap 1 (both vessels antegrade); Flap 2 (both artery and vein retrograde) |
| a. Flap 1 (both vessels antegrade); Flap 2 (artery retrograde, vein antegrade to vc) |
| b. Flap 1 (both vessels antegrade); Flap 2 (both retrograde) – unlikely |
| a. IMVs and subscapular-thoracodorsal system (preferably above serratus branch) |
| b. IMVs and pectoral vessels (unlikely) |
| c. IMVs and other vessels (cephalic vein loop, etc) – when in “trouble” |
| C. Combined intraflap and extra-flap anastomoses |