| Literature DB >> 31275656 |
Victor Emmanuel Gadelha Pinheiro1, Bianca Rohsner Bezerra1, Luís Arthur Brasil Gadelha Farias2, Irapuan Teles de Araujo Filho1, Marcio Ribeiro Studart da Fonseca1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Skin cancer is a rare indication of sternectomy. Our goal is to report the clinical course of seven patients who underwent sternectomy for skin cancer.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31275656 PMCID: PMC6582790 DOI: 10.1155/2019/3948782
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Skin Cancer ISSN: 2090-2913
Epidemiological profile of patients.
| Patient | Age [years] | Gender | Time of disease evolution until treatment [months] | Histological diagnosis |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 66 | Masculine | 12-24 | SSCC |
| 2 | 57 | Masculine | >24 | SSCC |
| 3 | 59 | Masculine | 6 | SSCC |
| 4 | 60 | Masculine | 6 | SSCC |
| 5 | 77 | Masculine | 6-12 | SSCC |
| 6 | 69 | Masculine | >24 | BCC |
| 7 | 49 | Masculine | >24 | BCC |
Figure 1Nonmelanoma Skin cancer on sternal region, invading ribs, clavicles, and manubrium sterni.
Figure 2Product of extended sternectomy with resection of parts of first and second ribs, proximal area of clavicle, and manubrium sterni.
Surgical profile.
| Patient | Surgery | Type of resection | Reconstruction | Adjuvant treatment (Radiotherapy) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Partial sternectomy, total thyroidectomy and cervical lymphadenectomy | R0 | Bilateral myocutaneous flap | Yes |
| 2 | Partial sternectomy, rib and clavicle resection and mediastinal lymphadenectomy | R0 | Unilateral myocutaneous flap | Yes |
| 3 | Partial sternectomy and mediastinal lymphadenectomy | R1 | Unilateral myocutaneous flap and skin graft | Yes |
| 4 | Partial sternectomy and cervical lymphadenectomy | R0 | Unilateral myocutaneous flap and polypropylene mesh | No |
| 5 | Partial sternectomy, rib and clavicle resection | R0 | Unilateral myocutaneous flap | Yes |
| 6 | Partial sternectomy, clavicle resection and mediastinal lymphadenectomy | R0 | Unilateral myocutaneous flap | No |
| 7 | Partial sternectomy | R0 | Unilateral myocutaneous flap and polypropylene mesh | No |
Histopathological profile of patients.
| Patient | Histological type | Perineural invasion | Angiolymphatic invasion | Bone invasion | Dimension of lesion [ cm] | Staging classification |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | SSCC | Yes | Yes | Yes | 7.0 x 6.5 | T4aN1M0 |
| 2 | SSCC |
|
|
|
| T4aN0M0 |
| 3 | SSCC | Yes | Yes | Yes | 7.0 x 5.8 | T4aN0M0 |
| 4 | SSCC | No | No | Yes | 12.0 x 9.5 | T4aN0M0 |
| 5 | SSCC | Yes | Yes | No | 4.0 x 1.0 | T3N0M0 |
| 6 | BCC basosquamous | No | No | Yes | 8.5 x 2.2 | T4aN0M0 |
| 7 | BCC nodular |
|
| Yes |
| T4aN0M0 |
∗Information not available in medical records.
Overall and disease-free survival.
| Patient | Overall survival from the surgery to last medical evaluation [months] | Disease free survival [months] | Recurrence site | Treatment of recurrence | State of health on the last medical evaluation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 84 | 84 | - | - | Cancer free |
| 2 | 96 | 19 | Unilateral axillary lymph node | Surgery (axillar lymphadenectomy) | Cancer free |
| 3 | 12 | 12 | - | - | Cancer free |
| 4 | 4 | 4 | - | - | Cancer free |
| 5 | 72 | 27 | Chest wall | Radiotherapy | Treating recurrence with radiotherapy |
| 6 | 72 | 50 | Body of sternum | Surgery (total sternectomy) | Cancer free |
| 7 | 12 | 12 | - | - | Cancer free |
Figure 3Functional preservation of the upper limbs after extended sternectomy and reconstruction with myocutaneous flap.
Figure 4Functional preservation of the upper limbs after extended sternectomy and reconstruction with myocutaneous flap.