Surgical cervicothoracic-flap repair of neoesophagus-airway fistula after esophagectomy for esophageal cancer: A retrospective cohort study.

airway-gastric fistula bronchial gastric fistula bronchio-esophageal fistula esophageal cancer esophagectomy gastrotracheal fistula thoracogastric-airway fistula tracheal stent tracheobronchial fistula tracheogastric fistula

Journal

JTCVS techniques
ISSN: 2666-2507
Titre abrégé: JTCVS Tech
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 101768546

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
Feb 2024
Historique:
received: 05 08 2023
revised: 29 10 2023
accepted: 30 10 2023
medline: 14 2 2024
pubmed: 14 2 2024
entrez: 14 2 2024
Statut: epublish

Résumé

To evaluate outcomes of surgical repair of postesophagectomy neoesophagus-airway fistulas (NEAFs). We retrospectively included consecutive patients with NEAF managed by various techniques at our center between August 2009 and July 2021. Of the 11 patients (median age, 60 years; interquartile range, 58, 62), 4 had received induction chemoradiotherapy and 4 others induction chemotherapy. NEAF was mainly a complication of anastomotic leakage (n = 6) or attempted stenosis treatment (n = 3). The airway mainly involved was the trachea (n = 8). Airway defects were repaired by resection-anastomosis (n = 5), perforator flaps (n = 4), pedicled pericardium (n = 1), and/or direct suturing (n = 2). Gastric conduit defects were repaired by perforator flaps (n = 6), direct suturing (n = 2), or pedicled pericardium (n = 1). Of the 7 perforator flaps, 4 were internal mammary-artery, two dorsal intercostal-artery, and one supraclavicular-artery flaps. After a median follow-up of 100 months, 2 patients died on early postoperative course from NEAF repair failure and 3 from late NEAF recurrence at 4, 11, and 33 months. Among the remaining 6 patients, 1 died from local tumoral recurrence at 13 months, 1 was last on follow-up at 27 months, alive and eating normally. The other 4 were free from NEAF recurrence and dysphagia or swallowing disorder at 50 months' follow-up. These 4 results were obtained thanks to perforator flap interposition and airway resection anastomosis. Surgical NEAF repair using perforator flap interposition may provide satisfactory long-term function after strong prehabilitation.

Identifiants

pubmed: 38351987
doi: 10.1016/j.xjtc.2023.10.027
pii: S2666-2507(23)00410-8
pmc: PMC10859646
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Pagination

123-131

Informations de copyright

© 2023 The Author(s).

Déclaration de conflit d'intérêts

The authors reported no conflicts of interest. The Journal policy requires editors and reviewers to disclose conflicts of interest and to decline handling or reviewing manuscripts for which they may have a conflict of interest. The editors and reviewers of this article have no conflicts of interest.

Auteurs

Thibaud Bertrand (T)

Department of Thoracic Surgery and Heart-Lung Transplantation, Université Paris-Saclay, Marie-Lannelongue Hospital, GHPSJ, Le Plessis Robinson, France.

Olaf Mercier (O)

Department of Thoracic Surgery and Heart-Lung Transplantation, Université Paris-Saclay, Marie-Lannelongue Hospital, GHPSJ, Le Plessis Robinson, France.

Nicolas Leymarie (N)

Department of Reconstructive Surgery, Gustave Roussy, Villejuif, France.

Justin Issard (J)

Department of Thoracic Surgery and Heart-Lung Transplantation, Université Paris-Saclay, Marie-Lannelongue Hospital, GHPSJ, Le Plessis Robinson, France.

Jean-François Honart (JF)

Department of Reconstructive Surgery, Gustave Roussy, Villejuif, France.

Dominique Fabre (D)

Department of Thoracic Surgery and Heart-Lung Transplantation, Université Paris-Saclay, Marie-Lannelongue Hospital, GHPSJ, Le Plessis Robinson, France.

Frédéric Kolb (F)

Department of Reconstructive Surgery, University of California, San Diego, San Diego, Calif.

Elie Fadel (E)

Department of Thoracic Surgery and Heart-Lung Transplantation, Université Paris-Saclay, Marie-Lannelongue Hospital, GHPSJ, Le Plessis Robinson, France.

Classifications MeSH