Chyle leakage after axillary node sampling in a patient with breast cancer: a case report.

Axillary node sampling Breast cancer Case report Chyle leakage Surgical treatment

Journal

Surgical case reports
ISSN: 2198-7793
Titre abrégé: Surg Case Rep
Pays: Germany
ID NLM: 101662125

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
01 Jun 2020
Historique:
received: 26 02 2020
accepted: 24 05 2020
entrez: 4 6 2020
pubmed: 4 6 2020
medline: 4 6 2020
Statut: epublish

Résumé

Chyle leakage is a well-known complication after thoracic surgery, such as esophagectomy, cardiac surgery, mediastinal lymph node dissection, and neck surgery. However, chyle leakage is a rare complication after dissections of the lateral or subclavian axillary nodes for breast surgery. It is particularly unusual for chyle leakage to occur after minimally invasive dissection of the axillary nodes. Most cases of chyle leakage subside with conservative management, but some cases require surgery. An 80-year-old woman had invasive lobular cancer of the left breast (cT1 [1.7 cm], cN0, M0) for which she underwent breast-conservative surgery and biopsy of an axillary sentinel lymph node. Because two of the three sentinel lymph nodes tested positive for cancer, seven lateral axillary lymph nodes (level I) were subsequently removed for the additional sampling. On postoperative day 11, the patient visited our outpatient clinic because of swelling in her left axillary region and breast. Centesis of the axilla yielded 670 mL of milky fluid, which suggested chyle leakage. We commenced the conservative management at first; however, the persistent leakage made us perform the surgical management. The operation was not only ligating the opening of the chyle duct but needed total mastectomy because the postoperative pathology report showed invasive lobular carcinoma; the nipple and the caudal surgical margin of the lumpectomy were positive for cancer. The patient agreed to our recommendation of total mastectomy and surgical management of the chyle leakage. Ligation of the opening completely resolved the chylous discharge. We here report a case of large-volume leakage of chyle after sampling dissection of the lateral axillary lymph nodes for left breast cancer; the leakage persisted despite the standard conservative therapy but was resolved after surgical treatment. Chyle leakage can occur even after minimally invasive dissection of the axillary nodes.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND BACKGROUND
Chyle leakage is a well-known complication after thoracic surgery, such as esophagectomy, cardiac surgery, mediastinal lymph node dissection, and neck surgery. However, chyle leakage is a rare complication after dissections of the lateral or subclavian axillary nodes for breast surgery. It is particularly unusual for chyle leakage to occur after minimally invasive dissection of the axillary nodes. Most cases of chyle leakage subside with conservative management, but some cases require surgery.
CASE REPORT METHODS
An 80-year-old woman had invasive lobular cancer of the left breast (cT1 [1.7 cm], cN0, M0) for which she underwent breast-conservative surgery and biopsy of an axillary sentinel lymph node. Because two of the three sentinel lymph nodes tested positive for cancer, seven lateral axillary lymph nodes (level I) were subsequently removed for the additional sampling. On postoperative day 11, the patient visited our outpatient clinic because of swelling in her left axillary region and breast. Centesis of the axilla yielded 670 mL of milky fluid, which suggested chyle leakage. We commenced the conservative management at first; however, the persistent leakage made us perform the surgical management. The operation was not only ligating the opening of the chyle duct but needed total mastectomy because the postoperative pathology report showed invasive lobular carcinoma; the nipple and the caudal surgical margin of the lumpectomy were positive for cancer. The patient agreed to our recommendation of total mastectomy and surgical management of the chyle leakage. Ligation of the opening completely resolved the chylous discharge.
CONCLUSION CONCLUSIONS
We here report a case of large-volume leakage of chyle after sampling dissection of the lateral axillary lymph nodes for left breast cancer; the leakage persisted despite the standard conservative therapy but was resolved after surgical treatment. Chyle leakage can occur even after minimally invasive dissection of the axillary nodes.

Identifiants

pubmed: 32488538
doi: 10.1186/s40792-020-00885-y
pii: 10.1186/s40792-020-00885-y
pmc: PMC7266922
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Pagination

119

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Auteurs

Norio Kohno (N)

Department of Breast Surgery, Kobe Kaisei Hospital, 3-11-15 Shinohara-Kitamachi, Nada-ku, Kobe, Hyogo, 657-0068, Japan. norio-kono@hi-net.zaq.ne.jp.

Takeo Kimoto (T)

Department of Breast Surgery, Kobe Kaisei Hospital, 3-11-15 Shinohara-Kitamachi, Nada-ku, Kobe, Hyogo, 657-0068, Japan.

Akiko Okamoto (A)

Department of Breast Surgery, Kobe Kaisei Hospital, 3-11-15 Shinohara-Kitamachi, Nada-ku, Kobe, Hyogo, 657-0068, Japan.

Hirokazu Tanino (H)

Department of Breast Surgery, Kobe University Hospital, 7-5-2 Kusunoki-cho, Chuo-ku, Kobe, Hyogo, 650-0017, Japan.

Classifications MeSH