Is surgery for multiple lung metastases reasonable? A total of 328 consecutive patients with multiple-laser metastasectomies with a new 1318-nm Nd:YAG laser.

J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg

Department of Thoracic and Vascular Surgery, Coswig Specialised Hospital, Center for Pneumology and Thoracic Surgery, Carl Gustav Carus University Dresden, Coswig/Dresden, Germany.

Published: June 2006

Objective: Our objective was to define the role of a new 1318-nm Nd:YAG laser for lobe- and parenchyma-saving resection of multiple lung metastases.

Patients And Methods: From January 1996 to December 2003, a total of 3267 nodules (10/patient) were removed from 328 patients (164 men/164 women, mean age 61 years). Criteria for eligibility were expanded to any primary tumors with no upper limit of metastases given. All parenchymal resections were performed with a new 1318-nm Nd:YAG laser whose effect on lung tissue differs significantly from that of the 1064-nm wavelength owing to a 10-fold higher absorption in water and one-third extinction in blood. In 93%, precision laser resection was achieved. The lobectomy rate was only 7%.

Results: Pathologic examination revealed 2546 metastases (8/patient) and lymph node disease in 19%. Complete resections (R0) were achieved in 93% of 177 patients undergoing unilateral procedures with a mean of 3 metastases (range 1%-29%) and 75% of 151 patients having bilateral operations with a mean of 13 metastases (range 2-124). The 5-year survival after R0 was 55% for solitary nodules, 41% for all patients, 28% for 10 metastases, and 26% for 20 or more metastases resected. Outcome was significantly poorer after incomplete resection (7%). No 30-day mortality was observed. Major postoperative complications included prolonged air leaks (n = 2), intrapleural bleeding (n = 2), and late pneumothorax (n = 2); all were treated successfully with a chest tube.

Conclusion: This new 1318-nm Nd:YAG laser facilitates complete resection of multiple bilateral centrally located metastases and thus is lobe sparing. Resection of 20 or more metastases is reasonable because long-term survival was significantly better than that observed with incomplete resection.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jtcvs.2005.11.053DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

1318-nm ndyag
16
ndyag laser
16
metastases
9
multiple lung
8
resection multiple
8
metastases range
8
incomplete resection
8
resection
6
patients
5
laser
5

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!