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Chemotherapy extravasation injuries beyond the immediate stage: A series of 15 cases treated according to a preset surgical algorithm based on time of presentation

Authors :
S, Abdel Al
W, Asha
A, Asha
M K, Abou Chaar
A, Jarrar
M, Qawasmi
H, Salameh
N, Alsaadi
Source :
Hand Surgery and Rehabilitation. 41:391-399
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

Chemotherapy extravasation can cause severe harm. There is a lack of evidence-based standardization on the surgical management of such injuries beyond the immediate stage. In an algorithm connecting presentation time post-injury with surgical treatment could help standardize future treatment. This study prospectively validated a preset standardized surgical algorithm based on presentation time in a consecutive series between October 2017 and October 2020. Chemotherapeutic agent, site and extent of injury, type of surgery and outcome at a minimum of 6 months' follow-up were collected. Seven thousand six hundred twelve individuals received chemotherapy during that period; 15 patients suffered extravasation injuries, 2 of whom were referred from outside our hospital. This algorithm distinguished: A) beyond the immediate stage and up to 2 days, treated with saline subcutaneous washout (SCWO) and vacuum-assisted closure (VAC) dressing; B) 2 to 5 days, open surgical decompression and VAC dressing; C) 5 to 10 days, non-operative management with surveillance; and D) more than 10 days, radical necrotic excision with or without VAC dressing and tissue reconstruction. In 2 patients in Group A and 3 patients in Group B, all vesicant symptoms resolved. Five of the 6 patients in Group C (3 vesicant, 3 non-vesicant) did not progress into necrosis or infection, and 1 case of vesicant extravasation progressed to a localized ulcer beyond this period and, as surgery was refused, led to a chronic ulcer with stiffness; 2 cases of non-vesicant extravasation developed a recall phenomenon but resolved after the third cycle. Of the 4 patients in Group D, all vesicant, 2 were treated with no complications, 1 had complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) due to late presentation, and 1, referred with necrotizing fasciitis, underwent above-elbow amputation but died due to septic shock. This study demonstrated a uniform surgical approach in a series of 15 cases; larger studies are still needed to validate the efficacy of this protocol in reducing morbidity. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: IV.

Details

ISSN :
24681229
Volume :
41
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Hand Surgery and Rehabilitation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....15606d319bfb1c3c7fc1f83bd89573f2
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hansur.2022.02.009