Abdominal Lymphatic Malformations: A Novel Approach in Management
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Topic Overview
Nuwanthika Karunaratne, Kishore Minhas, Premal Patel, Paolo De Coppi, Stefano Giuliani, Dhanya Mullassery, Joe Curry
Aim of the study: Abdominal lymphatic malformations (LM) are a challenging clinical entity. Complete excision can be impossible due to the infiltrative nature of some lesions and high rate of complications. Sclerotherapy may require multiple episodes of general anaesthesia and an inability to be definitive in terms of diagnosis and treatment. Subsequently we have adopted a newer algorithm of treatment involving a joint procedure with interventional radiology to enable an intra-operative treatment plan based on the findings. We present our early results.
Method: A retrospective observational study in a single tertiary paediatric centre from January 2019 to December 2023. The details of each patient were recorded along with their treatment pathway and outcome.
Results: 12 children underwent treatment for abdominal LM. Under GA and laparoscopic vision, pigtail catheters were inserted into the lesion to effect maximal drainage and assessment of surgical anatomy. If resection was feasible this was undertaken through a laparotomy and if not, the drains were retained and sclerotherapy was started.
Three underwent drainage with sclerotherapy without resection and 9 underwent drainage with resection. Of the 3 who underwent sclerotherapy 2 have had further treatment and remain under review at a mean follow up of 7.6 months. Of the other 9 there were no signs of recurrence of the LM at a mean follow up of 29 (range 6–56) months.
Conclusion: We have found a combined procedure involving IR-guided drainage under laparoscopic vision enabling curative surgical resection to be undertaken, where feasible, with currently no significant morbidity. For those in whom this is not possible then direct intralesional sclerotherapy is the next most useful treatment modality for longer term control of symptoms.
Transcript
Can a joint interventional radiology in general surgery procedure be used to treat abdominal lymphatic malformations? I'm Alex Halpern, a research fellow from Children's National. And this is an article that you should know. Kiruna Ratnet et al performed a single institution retrospective review from 2019 to 2023 to try and answer this question. In their joint procedure under direct laparoscopic vision, picatal catheters were inserted into the abdominal lymphatic malformations for maximal drainage and to assess the surgical anatomy. If after drainage, resection was feasible, this was completed, and if not, the drains were left in place and sclerotherapy was started. Twelve children underwent this joint procedure. Three underwent sclerotherapy and nine underwent surgical resection. Only two patients needed further treatment. This seems like a combined IR and surgical approach is feasible for treatment of abdominal lymphatic malformations. Does this information change your practice at all? Let us know what you think in the comments below.