Given these facts, it turns out to be a controversial decision for the surgical process and steps as how to do: One or two-stage, and for single-stage surgery, there comes some other questions: which one is to do first? Coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) or pulmonary resection? Shall we use cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) or not?.
In this article, we present a simultaneous coronary artery bypass grafting on a beating heart and right upper lobectomy in a 65-year-old male patient with a lung adenocarcinoma.
A written informed consent was obtained from the patient. Following general anesthesia, doublelumen endotracheal intubation was performed. The patient underwent only median sternotomy. Although the left internal mammary artery (LIMA) is often harvested under systemic heparinization to avoid early graft failure,[9] we preferred to harvest the LIMA before lung surgery without heparinization, due to the fact that heparinization would cause bleeding and a worse exposure eventually. Then, lobectomy of right upper lobe and mediastinal and a wide hilar lymph node excision were performed through median sternotomy. The frozen-section pathology result was reported as an adenocarcinoma for the excisional lung tissue and as the normal lymphatic tissue for the mediastinal lymph nodes. When the pulmonary resection and lymph node dissection were completed, hemostasis was secured prior to heparinization. After the lobectomy procedure, the patient underwent CABG on a beating heart without CPB. Anticoagulation was achieved using intravenous heparin (200 U/kg). The activated clotting time was maintained above 300 sec. The heart was stabilized using the Octopus suction stabilizer (Medtronic, Inc. Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA). The LIMA graft was anastomosed to the LAD with continuous 7-0 polypropylene on the beating heart. Two chest tubes for right, one for left, and one mediastinal tube were put in place, and the incision was closed in continuous layers. Postoperatively, the remaining right lung expanded without evidence of air leaks and the patient had an uneventful postoperative recovery. Final pathology revealed a 4-cm, moderately differentiated adenocarcinoma, and a negative hilar lymph node with a free bronchial margin, pathological stage IB (T2aN0M0). No oncologic treatment regimen was required. No complaints or clinical signs of recurrence were observed during the six-month followup period.
In single-stage procedures performing CABG before pulmonary resection may result in a remarkable difficulty in hilar exposure due to heparinization, which would be more difficult during CPB due to the need of higher doses of heparin.[3,14] The additional disadvantages of CPB include perioperative coagulopathy, immunosuppression, and the entrance of tumoral cells into the systemic blood circulation. Therefore, the avoidance of CPB may be beneficial by reducing the associated morbidity in patients undergoing myocardial revascularization with suitable coronary anatomy.
We recommend in such cases applying surgery in a single-stage procedure. Due to hilar exposure difficulties related to heparinization, harvesting LIMA and saphenous grafts should be the first step of surgery. In eligible cases, the second step should be pulmonary resection. In case of critical CHD and hemodynamic instabilities, pulmonary resection may follow CABG procedure, which would result in an additional difficulty in hilar and pulmonary exposure not to damage the bypassing grafts. Therefore, hilar dissection prior to heparinization may be beneficial for the surgeon in performing pulmonary dissection after CABG.
In conclusion, applying a single-stage procedure in patients with lung cancer who are amenable to surgery and coexisting coronary heart disease is an effective and safe method.
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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