| Literature DB >> 27449235 |
Oleksandr Butskiy1,2, Donald W Anderson3, Eitan Prisman3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Gastric pull up remains a popular reconstructive option for pharyngoesophagectomy defects extending to thoracic inlet. Gastric necrosis is a dreaded complication of gastric pull up reconstruction and few studies report on management of this complication. MEDLINE, EMBASE, and Web of Science™ databases were searched for publications in the last 25 years on gastric pull up reconstruction following pharyngoesophagectomy. The rates of complications related to gastropharyngeal anastomosis were extracted, and methods of managing gastric necrosis were noted. Forty seven case series were identified reporting on the use of gastric pull up for reconstruction of pharyngoesophageal defects. Mortality rate varied from 0 to 33 % with a weighted average of 8.6 %. In 39 % of patients, mortality was either caused or directly related to failure of the gastropharyngeal anastomosis. The reported rate of gastric necrosis ranged from 0 to 24 % resulting in a 28 % mortality. Options for managing gastric necrosis included: temporary cervical diversion, free jejunum flap, colonic interposition, tubed radial forearm flap, deltopectoralis and pectoralis myocutaneous flaps. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Anterolateral thigh; Gastric pull up; Head and neck cancer; Head and neck reconstruction; Pharyngoesophagectomy
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27449235 PMCID: PMC4957331 DOI: 10.1186/s40463-016-0153-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg ISSN: 1916-0208
Fig. 1a Circumferential necrosis of the stomach at the gastropharyngeal anastomosis. b Anterolatral thigh flap folded in a conical design
Fig. 2Endoscopic view of anastomosis one month following anterolateral thigh rescue of gastric pull up failure. a Pharyngo-cutaneous anastomosis. b cutaneo-gastric anastomosis. c gastric mucosa distant to the anterolateral thigh flap. ***base of the tongue
Fig. 3Patient’s laryngostoma three months after the operation
Mortality and gastropharyngeal anastomosis complications after pharyngo-esophagectomy and gastric pull up
| Author year | Patients (N) | Anastomotic leak | Necrosis (%) | Anastomotic stricture (%) | In-hospital mortality (%) | Cause of mortality (N) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mansour [ | 6 | 1 (17 %) | 0 | 0 | 0 | – |
| El-Naqeeb [ | 24 | 1 (4 %) | – | – | 0 | – |
| Mehta [ | 75 | 10 (13 %) | – | – | 7 (9 %) | Pulmonary sepsis and respiratory failure (2); PE(1); carotid castrophe(1); MI (2); cirrhosis, ascites, septicemia (1) |
| Spiro [ | 120 | 15 (13 %) | 5 (4 %) | – | 13 (11 %) | Anastomotic leakage, tracheal injury, major arterial bleeding (8); respiratory insufficiency (2); liver failure with sepsis (1); peritonitis after acute pseudomembranous colitis (1); multisystem failure with massive intrapleural bleeding after central venous line injury (1) |
| Madsen [ | 3 | – | – | – | 0 | – |
| Carlson [ | 23 | 6 (26 %) | 0 | 3 (13 %) | 2 (9 %) | Ruptured innominate artery after fistula formation (1); MI (1) |
| Wight [ | 16 | 3 (19 %) | – | – | 2 (13 %) | Cerebrovascular accident and later dehiscence of the anterior part of the pharyngo-gastric anastomosis (1); fistula between trachea and the subclavian artery (1) |
| Marmuse [ | 20 | 1 (5 %) | – | – | 2 (10 %) | MI (2) |
| Cahow [ | 59 | 2 (3 %) | 1 (2 %) | 4 (7 %) | 3 (5 %) | Thoracic duct injury with pneumothorax, MI, heart failure, cardiogenic shock(1); pneumothorax, pneumonic sepsis, disseminated intravascular coagulation, multiple organ failure (1); jejunostomy tube displacement, peritonitis and sepsis (1) |
| Laterza [ | 49 | 2 (4 %) | 2 (4 %) | – | 3 (6 %) | – |
| Yoshino [ | 4 | – | – | – | 0 | – |
| Bardini [ | 95 | 22 (23 %) | 10 (11 %) | – | 14 (15 %) | Anastomotic leak (5); gastric necrosis (4); other (5) |
| Shenoy [ | 105 | 15 (14 %) | 10 (10 %) | 0 | 16 (15 %) | Intraoperative death due to injury to the posterior tracheal wall injury (1); pharyngocutaneous fistula (5); obsturctive pulmonary disease, pneumotitis or septicemia (9) |
| Axon [ | 29 | 3 (10 %) | 0 | 1 (3 %) | 4 (14 %) | – |
| Azurin [ | 19 | 1 (5 %) | 0 | 2 (11 %) | 1 (5 %) | Intraoperatively discovered cirrhosis, anastomotic leak, acute liver failure, multiorgan failure (1) |
| Al Ghamdi [ | 15 | 6 (40 %) | – | 2 (13 %) | 1 (7 %) | Fistula leading to bronchopneumonia (1) |
| Wei [ | 69 | 6 (9 %) | 1 (1 %) | – | 6 (9 %) | Gastric fundus necrosis (1); chest infection and cardiac problems (2); recurrent tumor (2); cerbrovascular accident (1) |
| Dudhat [ | 60 | 5 (8 %) | – | 0 | 5 (8 %) | Pulmonary sepsis (1); MI (2); carotid blow out secondary to anastomotic leak (1); septicaemia related to anastomotic leak (1) |
| Hartley [ | 41 | 1 (2 %) | – | – | 3 (7 %) | Bronchopneumonia (2); hemorrhage(1) |
| Sullivan [ | 32 | 10 (32 %) | – | – | 4 (12 %) | Multiorgan failure as a result of uncontrolled neck sepsis due to anastomotic leak and fistula (2); PE (1); MI (1) |
| Affleck [ | 31 | 2 (6 %) | – | – | 3 (10 %) | – |
| Martins [ | 30 | 8 (27 %) | 2 (7 %) | – | 6 (20 %) | Innominate artery rupture (2); carotid artery rupture (1); pneumonia (1); cardiac arrhythmia (1); pulmpnary embolus (1) |
| Sagawa [ | 6 | 1 (17 %) | 1 (17 %) | 0 | 1 (17 %) | Gastric necrosis leading to arterial bleeding (1) |
| Jones [ | 50 | 1 (2 %) | 4 (8 %) | 1 (2 %) | – | – |
| Triboulet [ | 127 | 20 (16 %) | 2 (2 %) | 8 (6 %) | – | – |
| Ullah [ | 26 | 4 (15 %) | – | 5 (19 %) | 3 (12 %) | Pneumonia (1); congestive heart failure (1); PE (1) |
| Wong [ | 12 | 1 (8 %) | – | – | 0 | – |
| Puttawibul [ | 48 | 4 (8 %) | 1 (2 %) | – | 1 (2 %) | Fundal necrosis, localized infection and carotid artery blow out(1) |
| Rossi [ | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | – |
| Clark [ | 21 | 10 (48 %) | 5 (24 %) | 6 (29 %) | – | |
| Llorente Pendas [ | 12 | 6 (50 %) | – | – | 4 (33 %) | Cervical Fistual and Sepsis (2); subphrenic abscess (1); general deterioration and multiple organ failure (1) |
| Pesko [ | 29 | 5 (17 %) | 0 | – | 3 (10 %) | Anastomotic leak and systemic sepsis (3) |
| Daiko [ | 19 | 2 (11 %) | 2 (11 %) | – | 2 (11 %) | Necrosis of the stomach (1) |
| Iseli [ | 7 | 0 | – | 0 | 0 | – |
| Krdžalić [ | 4 | 1 (25 %) | – | – | 0 | – |
| Ferahkose [ | 38 | 1 (3 %) | 2 (5 %) | 0 | 2 (5 %) | Gastric necrsosis with sepsis (2) |
| Keereweer [ | 19 | 10 (53 %) | 2 (11 %) | – | 3 (16 %) | Gastric necrosis and respiratory failure (1); mediastinal hemorrhage (1); carotid blow out (1) |
| Mansour [ | 5 | – | – | – | 0 | – |
| Shuangba [ | 208 | 19 (9 %) | – | 7 (3 %) | 4 (2 %) | Pneumonitis(1); heart failure(2); hemoperitoneum(1) |
| Tong [ | 70 | 4 (6 %) | 3 (4 %) | – | 3 (4 %) | Pneumonia (3) |
| Camaioni [ | 23 | 2 (9 %) | – | – | 2 (9 %) | – |
| Sreehariprasad [ | 17 | 1 (6 %) | – | – | 0 | – |
| Joshi [ | 32 | – | 5 (16 %) | – | 6 (19 %) | – |
| Lambert [ | 9 | 1 (11 %) | – | – | 0 | – |
| Sayles [ | 19 | 9 (47 %) | – | – | – | – |
| Denewer [ | 32 | 5 (16 %) | 0 | 3 (9 %) | – | – |
| Sun [ | 48 | 4 (8 %) | – | – | – | – |
Rescue of gastric pull up necrosis following pharyngo-esophagectomy
| Author year | Patients (N) | Rescue method | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bardini [ | 10 | 8 patients: resection of the necrosis, temporary cervical diversion and delayed reanastomosis; | Four deaths as a result of necrosis |
| Wei [ | 1 | Initially salvaged by controlled pharyngostomy and gastrotomy | Carotid blow out and death |
| Triboulet [ | 2 | Temporary cervical diversion, tubed radial forearm flap | – |
| Temporary cervical diversion, deltopectoralis myocutaneous flap | – | ||
| Tong [ | 3 | Debridement of necrotic stomach and staged reconstruction with pectoralis major myocutaneous flap | Survived |
– : no information
Fig. 4A decision tree for managing suspected anastomotic leaks following gastric pull up reconstruction after pharyngoesophagectomy. Decisions made in the case report are highlighted in bold