Cargando…

Inadvertent Inguinal Sarcoma Excision during Hernia Surgery: Outcomes, Gender Analysis, and Prevention

INTRODUCTION: Inadvertent excision of a soft tissue sarcoma during hernia surgery is a preventable clinical scenario that leads to unnecessary patient morbidity. Prior series are few, which only include male patients with little focus on prevention. The purpose of this study is to report the present...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Lawrenz, Joshua M., Norris, James P., Tan, Marcus C., Shinohara, Eric T., Block, John J., Davis, Elizabeth J., Keedy, Vicki L., Halpern, Jennifer L., Holt, Ginger E., Schwartz, Herbert S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7787872/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33489372
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/8374790
_version_ 1783632916649082880
author Lawrenz, Joshua M.
Norris, James P.
Tan, Marcus C.
Shinohara, Eric T.
Block, John J.
Davis, Elizabeth J.
Keedy, Vicki L.
Halpern, Jennifer L.
Holt, Ginger E.
Schwartz, Herbert S.
author_facet Lawrenz, Joshua M.
Norris, James P.
Tan, Marcus C.
Shinohara, Eric T.
Block, John J.
Davis, Elizabeth J.
Keedy, Vicki L.
Halpern, Jennifer L.
Holt, Ginger E.
Schwartz, Herbert S.
author_sort Lawrenz, Joshua M.
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Inadvertent excision of a soft tissue sarcoma during hernia surgery is a preventable clinical scenario that leads to unnecessary patient morbidity. Prior series are few, which only include male patients with little focus on prevention. The purpose of this study is to report the presenting features and outcomes of both male and female patients who underwent inadvertent inguinal sarcoma excision during hernia surgery. METHODS: A retrospective analysis of a single sarcoma referral center identified 33 patients who were referred for definitive treatment. Patients were divided into three clinically relevant groups based on intraoperative diagnosis, sex, and location of the mass relative to the inguinal ligament. T-tests and Fisher's exact tests were performed to compare continuous and categorical variables, respectively. Kaplan–Meier modeling was performed to assess sarcoma-specific survival. RESULTS: Females were younger (47 years vs. 61 years, p=0.003) and had smaller sarcomas (6.7 cm vs. 11 cm, p=0.012) compared to males. Only two sarcomas (2/33, 6%) were <4 cm in size. The majority of sarcomas in females were above the inguinal ligament (12/14, 86%). Twenty-nine (88%) underwent definitive R0 excision. The mean number of surgeries per patient was three (range 1–13), with nineteen (58%) patients requiring flap reconstruction and six (18%) requiring vascular bypass. Five patients locally recurred (15%) at a mean of 38 months after definitive excision (range 5–128 months). Overall sarcoma-specific disease-free survival was 64%, with no difference between males (80 ± 11%) and females (59 ± 17%) (p=0.885). Mean follow-up was 75 months (range 5–212). CONCLUSION: This is the second largest study regarding inadvertent inguinal sarcoma excision and the first to include females. When a suspected hernia is >4 cm, irreducible, firm, and is growing, especially in females, consider obtaining preoperative advanced three-dimensional imaging (CT or MRI) that can differentiate a neoplasm from a hernia.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7787872
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher Hindawi
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-77878722021-01-22 Inadvertent Inguinal Sarcoma Excision during Hernia Surgery: Outcomes, Gender Analysis, and Prevention Lawrenz, Joshua M. Norris, James P. Tan, Marcus C. Shinohara, Eric T. Block, John J. Davis, Elizabeth J. Keedy, Vicki L. Halpern, Jennifer L. Holt, Ginger E. Schwartz, Herbert S. Int J Surg Oncol Research Article INTRODUCTION: Inadvertent excision of a soft tissue sarcoma during hernia surgery is a preventable clinical scenario that leads to unnecessary patient morbidity. Prior series are few, which only include male patients with little focus on prevention. The purpose of this study is to report the presenting features and outcomes of both male and female patients who underwent inadvertent inguinal sarcoma excision during hernia surgery. METHODS: A retrospective analysis of a single sarcoma referral center identified 33 patients who were referred for definitive treatment. Patients were divided into three clinically relevant groups based on intraoperative diagnosis, sex, and location of the mass relative to the inguinal ligament. T-tests and Fisher's exact tests were performed to compare continuous and categorical variables, respectively. Kaplan–Meier modeling was performed to assess sarcoma-specific survival. RESULTS: Females were younger (47 years vs. 61 years, p=0.003) and had smaller sarcomas (6.7 cm vs. 11 cm, p=0.012) compared to males. Only two sarcomas (2/33, 6%) were <4 cm in size. The majority of sarcomas in females were above the inguinal ligament (12/14, 86%). Twenty-nine (88%) underwent definitive R0 excision. The mean number of surgeries per patient was three (range 1–13), with nineteen (58%) patients requiring flap reconstruction and six (18%) requiring vascular bypass. Five patients locally recurred (15%) at a mean of 38 months after definitive excision (range 5–128 months). Overall sarcoma-specific disease-free survival was 64%, with no difference between males (80 ± 11%) and females (59 ± 17%) (p=0.885). Mean follow-up was 75 months (range 5–212). CONCLUSION: This is the second largest study regarding inadvertent inguinal sarcoma excision and the first to include females. When a suspected hernia is >4 cm, irreducible, firm, and is growing, especially in females, consider obtaining preoperative advanced three-dimensional imaging (CT or MRI) that can differentiate a neoplasm from a hernia. Hindawi 2020-12-07 /pmc/articles/PMC7787872/ /pubmed/33489372 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/8374790 Text en Copyright © 2020 Joshua M. Lawrenz et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Lawrenz, Joshua M.
Norris, James P.
Tan, Marcus C.
Shinohara, Eric T.
Block, John J.
Davis, Elizabeth J.
Keedy, Vicki L.
Halpern, Jennifer L.
Holt, Ginger E.
Schwartz, Herbert S.
Inadvertent Inguinal Sarcoma Excision during Hernia Surgery: Outcomes, Gender Analysis, and Prevention
title Inadvertent Inguinal Sarcoma Excision during Hernia Surgery: Outcomes, Gender Analysis, and Prevention
title_full Inadvertent Inguinal Sarcoma Excision during Hernia Surgery: Outcomes, Gender Analysis, and Prevention
title_fullStr Inadvertent Inguinal Sarcoma Excision during Hernia Surgery: Outcomes, Gender Analysis, and Prevention
title_full_unstemmed Inadvertent Inguinal Sarcoma Excision during Hernia Surgery: Outcomes, Gender Analysis, and Prevention
title_short Inadvertent Inguinal Sarcoma Excision during Hernia Surgery: Outcomes, Gender Analysis, and Prevention
title_sort inadvertent inguinal sarcoma excision during hernia surgery: outcomes, gender analysis, and prevention
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7787872/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33489372
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/8374790
work_keys_str_mv AT lawrenzjoshuam inadvertentinguinalsarcomaexcisionduringherniasurgeryoutcomesgenderanalysisandprevention
AT norrisjamesp inadvertentinguinalsarcomaexcisionduringherniasurgeryoutcomesgenderanalysisandprevention
AT tanmarcusc inadvertentinguinalsarcomaexcisionduringherniasurgeryoutcomesgenderanalysisandprevention
AT shinoharaerict inadvertentinguinalsarcomaexcisionduringherniasurgeryoutcomesgenderanalysisandprevention
AT blockjohnj inadvertentinguinalsarcomaexcisionduringherniasurgeryoutcomesgenderanalysisandprevention
AT daviselizabethj inadvertentinguinalsarcomaexcisionduringherniasurgeryoutcomesgenderanalysisandprevention
AT keedyvickil inadvertentinguinalsarcomaexcisionduringherniasurgeryoutcomesgenderanalysisandprevention
AT halpernjenniferl inadvertentinguinalsarcomaexcisionduringherniasurgeryoutcomesgenderanalysisandprevention
AT holtgingere inadvertentinguinalsarcomaexcisionduringherniasurgeryoutcomesgenderanalysisandprevention
AT schwartzherberts inadvertentinguinalsarcomaexcisionduringherniasurgeryoutcomesgenderanalysisandprevention