The general surgery, cardiovascular surgery departments, and the patient agreed on a consensus for simultaneous surgery for both ischemic heart disease and gastric adenocarcinoma.
Through a midline sternotomy, the pericardium was opened. An evaluation of the coronary arteries revealed a graftable LAD but a diffusely calcified and thin circumflex artery. The left internal thoracic artery (LITA) was harvested and prepared. The patient was heparinized, and his activated clotting time (ACT) levels were kept at approximately 250 seconds. This level is half the ACT level during CABG with cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). Left internal thoracic artery-LAD anastomosis was performed as the heart was beating by using a tissue stabilizer (Octopus® 3 Tissue Stabilizer, Medtronic, US). After the sternotomy closure, a midline laparotomy was performed under the same anesthetic setting. During the exploration, the tumor was located at the gastric corpus, and it had invaded the serosa. There were metastatic lymph nodes located at the minor omentum. A distal subtotal gastrectomy and gastrojejunostomy were performed. The patient was taken to the intensive care unit (ICU) postoperatively and to the ward on the first postoperative day. Oral fluids were started on the third postoperative day. He was uneventfully discharged on the eighth postoperative day. At present, two years after surgery, the patient has no cardiac symptoms, and he is receiving appropriate treatment for the gastric carcinoma.
There is no agreement whether to perform these operations simultaneously or in a two-stage manner.[4] In the literature, there are reports supporting the simultaneous surgical strategy.[5-7] It is also known that CPB enhances the systemic inflammatory response which can lead to several comorbidities, especially in a patient with a malignancy that requires prolonged and special postoperative care.[1] This situation may also exhaust the general condition of the patient and result in delaying the final surgery. Additionally, although there has yet been no definite data about how CPB influences the outcome of patients with malignant disease, there is general agreement that tumor seeding during CPB may also lead to problems in these patients. Off-pump CABG is a good alternative in this regard as it does not carry the risks of CPB. Thus, it can be stated that off-pump CABG can be a better option in simultaneous operations.[1]
In this case, we preferred off-pump CABG through a midline sternotomy instead of a minimally invasive procedure because we planned to bypass the circumflex artery in addition to the LAD preoperatively. However, at the time of exploration, we could not find a graftable target within the circumflex territory. Therefore, only a LIMA-LAD anastomosis was carried out on a beating heart setting.
In conclusion, this case shows that simultaneous off-pump CABG in conjunction with a gastrectomy is a safe and effective procedure and has advantages over a two-stage procedure. This strategy decreases the risks of bleeding, inflammatory response, and tumor seeding due to CBP. Off-pump CABG should be considered as a viable alternative to a percutaneous procedure in the malignancy setting and has an advantage over this procedure because the operation can be performed simultaneously with the final malignancy procedure.
Declaration of conflicting interests
The authors declared no conflicts of interest with respect
to the authorship and/or publication of this article.
Funding
The authors received no financial support for the
research and/or authorship of this article.
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