Mario F Scaglioni1,2, Michael Arvanitakis2, Yen-Chou Chen1, Pietro Giovanoli2, Johnson Chia-Shen Yang1, Edward I Chang3. 1. Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Kaohsiung Chang Gung Memorial Hospital and Chang Gung University College of Medicine, Kaohsiung, Taiwan. 2. Department of Plastic and Hand Surgery, University Hospital Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland. 3. Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Lymphedema remains a challenging clinical problem. A new field of lymphatic surgery using micro and super microsurgery techniques is a rapidly advancing field aimed to treat recalcitrant cases. The objective of this study was to evaluate outcomes and complications of vascularized lymph node transfer (VLNT). Several early preliminary studies have reported promising outcomes, but they are limited by small numbers, short follow-up, and are inconsistent in addressing the origin and recipient site of the transferred lymph nodes as well as the donor site morbidity. METHODS: A review of literature was conducted using PubMed-MEDLINE, EMBASE for key words vascularized lymph node transfer (also autologous, lymph node transplant). Only human studies were included. RESULTS: A total 24 studies encompassing 271 vascularized lymph node transfers were included. The inguinal nodes were the most commonly used donor site followed by the lateral thoracic lymph nodes. The lateral thoracic lymph nodes were the least effective and had the highest complication rates (27.5%) compared to other lymph node donor sites (inguinal: 10.3% and supraclavicular: 5.6%). Upper extremity lymphedema responded better compared to lower extremity (74.2 vs. 53.2%), but there was no difference in placing the lymph nodes more proximally versus distally on the extremity (proximal: 76.9% vs. distal: 80.4%). CONCLUSION: Vascularized lymph node transfer for lymphedema treatment is a promising operative technique showing beneficial results in early but also in advanced stage lymphedema. This physiologic surgical procedure should be included in a modern reconstructive concept for lymphedema treatment.
INTRODUCTION:Lymphedema remains a challenging clinical problem. A new field of lymphatic surgery using micro and super microsurgery techniques is a rapidly advancing field aimed to treat recalcitrant cases. The objective of this study was to evaluate outcomes and complications of vascularized lymph node transfer (VLNT). Several early preliminary studies have reported promising outcomes, but they are limited by small numbers, short follow-up, and are inconsistent in addressing the origin and recipient site of the transferred lymph nodes as well as the donor site morbidity. METHODS: A review of literature was conducted using PubMed-MEDLINE, EMBASE for key words vascularized lymph node transfer (also autologous, lymph node transplant). Only human studies were included. RESULTS: A total 24 studies encompassing 271 vascularized lymph node transfers were included. The inguinal nodes were the most commonly used donor site followed by the lateral thoracic lymph nodes. The lateral thoracic lymph nodes were the least effective and had the highest complication rates (27.5%) compared to other lymph node donor sites (inguinal: 10.3% and supraclavicular: 5.6%). Upper extremity lymphedema responded better compared to lower extremity (74.2 vs. 53.2%), but there was no difference in placing the lymph nodes more proximally versus distally on the extremity (proximal: 76.9% vs. distal: 80.4%). CONCLUSION: Vascularized lymph node transfer for lymphedema treatment is a promising operative technique showing beneficial results in early but also in advanced stage lymphedema. This physiologic surgical procedure should be included in a modern reconstructive concept for lymphedema treatment.
Authors: Pedro Ciudad; Oscar J Manrique; Samyd S Bustos; Mouchammed Agko; Tony Chieh-Ting Huang; Luis Vizcarra; Marco Lazo Nuñez; Federico Lo Torto; Antonio J Forte Journal: Gland Surg Date: 2020-04
Authors: Eunson Jung; Daniel Gardner; Dongwon Choi; Eunkyung Park; Young Jin Seong; Sara Yang; Jorge Castorena-Gonzalez; Antoine Louveau; Zhao Zhou; Gene K Lee; David P Perrault; Sunju Lee; Maxwell Johnson; George Daghlian; Maria Lee; Yeo Jin Hong; Yukinari Kato; Jonathan Kipnis; Michael J Davis; Alex K Wong; Young-Kwon Hong Journal: Sci Rep Date: 2017-07-17 Impact factor: 4.379