Literature DB >> 28376631

Surgical approach to posterior mediastinal lesions and long-term outcomes.

Celalettin I Kocaturk1, Celal B Sezen1, Cemal Aker1, Cem E Kalafat1, Salih Bilen1, Ali C Kutluk1, Kemal Karapinar1, Sertan Erdogan1, Ozkan Saydam1.   

Abstract

Background Posterior mediastinal lesions are classified as solid lesions and cysts. The treatment for both types is surgery. We evaluated the surgical outcomes and recurrence rates after video-assisted thoracic surgery and thoracotomy for posterior mediastinal lesions. Methods Data of 66 resections for posterior mediastinal masses between 2000 and 2014 were reviewed retrospectively. Twenty-two patients were treated by video-assisted thoracic surgery (group V) and 44 underwent thoracotomy (group T); 29 (43.9%) were female and 37 (56.1%) were male, the mean age was 45.9 ± 14.7 years. Results Bronchogenic cyst was the most common cystic lesion (10/12, 83.3%), and benign schwannoma was the most common solid lesion (32/54, 59.2%). The mean diameter of solid lesions was 5.19 ± 2.4 cm (group V 3.98 ± 1.8 vs. group T 5.78 ± 2.5 cm, p = 0.006). The tumor diameter was 4.06 ± 1.9 cm in asymptomatic patients and 6.93 ± 2.2 cm ( p < 0.001) in symptomatic patients. In group V, hospital stay and duration of drainage were significantly shorter than in group T ( p = 0.02, p = 0.01). Local recurrence was detected in 4 (6.1%) patients. Cystic lesions had a higher recurrence rate than solid lesions ( p = 0.01). There was no significant difference in recurrence rates in groups V and T ( p = 0.59). Conclusion Video-assisted thoracic surgery is a safe method for surgical treatment of posterior mediastinal lesions, with a shorter drainage time and postoperative hospitalization and similar recurrence rates. More recurrences are seen in patients with cystic lesions.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Mediastinal Neoplasms; Mediastinal cyst; Thoracic surgery; Thoracotomy; Treatment outcome; video-assisted

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28376631     DOI: 10.1177/0218492317705040

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Asian Cardiovasc Thorac Ann        ISSN: 0218-4923


  1 in total

1.  Video-assisted thoracoscopic resection of a thoracic inlet schwannoma with neuroforaminal involvement: a case report.

Authors:  Rebecca C Gologorsky; Jeffrey B Velotta
Journal:  AME Case Rep       Date:  2022-04-25
  1 in total

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