Methods: Between January 2008 and December 2014, nine patients (5 males, 4 females; mean age 37 years; range 17 to 48 years) with mediastinal tumors underwent preoperative embolization of the feeding arteries before surgery. All patients received a combination of polyvinyl alcohol particles (300-1200 μm) in combination with coils. The criterion for the embolization effectiveness was to reduce intraoperative hemorrhage.
Results: In eight patients, embolization was successfully completed without any complication. The feeding vessels of each tumor were occluded. No symptomatic complications related to embolization were observed. Tumors were totally removed in eight patients. Embolization clearly reduced the severity of bleeding during surgery, lowered the surgical risks due to blood loss, and reduced the difficulty of tumor resections. No intra- or postoperative complication was seen.
Conclusion: Our study highlights the importance and essence of preoperative embolization to control bleeding during surgery, particularly in large-size tumor resections with an excessive vascular nature. Based on our study results, we suggest interventional embolization as a prerequisite before hypervascular mediastinal tumor surgery to reduce morbidity and mortality.
Embolization is used for several purposes including to decrease the tumor size before excisional surgery, to allow surgery by reducing intraoperative hemorrhage, to manage acute hemorrhage, and for palliative care and tumor reduction.[2] Embolization of large hypervascular mediastinal tumors is considered critical in tumor resection, as it mainly decreases blood loss during surgery, provides a clearer operative field for the surgeon, and reduces the associated morbidities.[3,4]
In the present study, we present our experience of preoperative embolization in patients with mediastinal tumors with an excessive vascular nature and to evaluate the efficacy and safety of the embolization procedures.
All patients underwent routine biochemical tests, radiographs, pulmonary function tests, and CT. Based on the CT scans, angiography was carried out to identify the rich vascularization of the tumors in each case. Tumor vascularization on the arterial angiogram was defined as moderate for three patients and as extensive for six patients. Multiple feeding vessel embolization procedures under local anesthesia in a single session were performed. All catheterizations were performed via a transfemoral approach by the Seldinger technique. A 6F to 8F catheters were used. The suspected feeding arteries were delineated and followed by super selective catheterization one by one. Various particle embolization agents (Contour embolization particles, Boston Scientific, Natick, MA, USA; Embosphere, Biosphere Medical, France; Embozone, San Antonio, TX, USA) with a diameter ranging from 300 to 1200 μm were injected using an appropriate contrast medium mixture. Embolization started with small-sized particles and followed by larger-sized ones to occlude capillary bed and feeding arteries. After complete occlusion was achieved, one or more 0.018-inch fibered platinum microcoils (Vortex, Boston Scientific, France; Tornado, Cook Inc., Bloomington, IN) were deployed at the proximal part of the main artery to prevent recanalization until the operation. Ranging from 48 h to five days after embolization, the patients underwent mediastinal tumor resection. Total excision of anterior mediastinal tumors was performed using sternotomy, while the others were performed through posterolateral thoracotomy.
The study protocol was approved by the Dr. Siyami Ersek Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery Training and Research Hospital Ethics Committee. A written informed consent was obtained from each patient. The study was conducted in accordance with the principles of the Declaration of Helsinki.
The detailed information for each procedure is summarized in Table 1. In nine embolization cases, a total of 12 arteries were embolized. The most common artery which was embolized was the right branchial artery. The complaints following embolization were often mild, while only four patients recorded pain. The detailed clinical characteristics of patients are summarized in Table 2. The lesions were located at the anterior mediastinum (n=3), at the middle mediastinum (n=3), and at the posterior mediastinum (n=3). There were three cases of teratoma, three cases of Schwannoma, two cases of Castleman disease, and one case of paraganglioma. The mean tumor diameter was 9.2 (range, 3 to 15) cm.
Table 1: Embolization procedure
Table 2: Clinical characteristic of patients
The removal of the tumors was carried out with minimal blood loss with clearer operative field and shorter length of surgery in patients undergoing preoperative embolization. Four patients did not receive any intra- or postoperative blood transfusion, while two patients received two units and the other two patients received one unit of blood transfusion. However, one patient with partial embolization received a total of 12 units of blood transfusion. The mean length of stay in the hospital following surgery was 6.2 (range, 4 to 10) days.
Preoperative embolization of large mediastinal tumors is considered critical in tumor resection, as in most cases, large mediastinal tumors have a rich blood supply derived from multiple arteries. Surgery of highly vascular thoracic sarcomas can be risky, as it is amplified by potential hemorrhage and poor vascular control.[10] In addition, the most optimal treatment choice for paragangliomas is surgical resection following preoperative embolization due to their high vascularity.[11] Although Castleman disease is unusual, critical bleeding is often experienced during surgery due to the hypervascular nature of the tumor.[12,13]
There are many cases reported in the literature showing that the surgeons were unable to complete tumor resection operations due to massive bleeding.[10,14,15] Neuroendocrine tumors are highly vascular in nature, and many patients experience intraoperative hemorrhagic complications.[16] Morandi et al.[14] reported that, during right thoracotomy, the mass which was reported as a hemangiopericytoma was highly vascularized and massive bleeding from the tumor tissue occurred during the dissection. Therefore, they were only able to perform a biopsy procedure and, then, planned arterial embolization.
Furthermore, there are several cases which resulted in mortality due to severe bleeding during tumor resection. Aydemir et al.[15] reported a patient with a giant (15 cm) solitary fibrous tumor supplied by multiple intercostal arteries and an aberrant artery branched off the celiac trunk in his subdiaphragmatic region in whom embolization failed due to a high number of arteries. The authors decided to control possible bleeding by inducing total circulatory arrest through cardiopulmonary bypass. Although cardiopulmonary bypass was completed successfully, the patient died due to massive bleeding.
In addition, in some cases, the aberrant vascular pedicles spread through the pleura, where the tumor is attached and fed. In such cases, intraoperative bleeding would not originate from one site, but from many sites on the pleura surface. Thus, it would become impossible to control the massive bleeding and continue surgery. For such cases, we believe that embolization is a must.
In conclusion, complete embolization before hypervascular mediastinal tumor surgery is necessary to reduce intraoperative bleeding effectively, to provide a clearer operative field for the surgeon, and to allow a complete surgical resection. It also lowers the mortality risk. Based on our study results, it is evident that preoperative embolization is a safe, beneficial, and valuable preoperative adjunct in the treatment of large thoracic mediastinal tumors with an excessive vascular nature. We suggest that there is also a high need of three-phase computed tomography for the final evaluation and highly recommend angiography of all massive chest tumors before any scheduled operations.
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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