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Minimally invasive surgery for neuroblastic tumours: A SIOPEN multicentre study: Proposal for guidelines

Authors :
Aurélien Scalabre
Kate Cross
Girolamo Mattioli
Yves Heloury
P. Lobos
S. Faraj
N. Basta
H.O. Gabra
Luca Pio
Kristin Bjørnland
J. Gómez Chacón Villalba
Calogero Virgone
Giovanna Riccipetitoni
Sabine Irtan
A. Froeba-Pohl
S.W. Warmann
Jörg Fuchs
Marc David Leclair
Paul D. Losty
Lucas Matthyssens
Sabine Sarnacki
G. Guillen Burrieza
Michael Nightingale
Florent Guérin
Source :
European Journal of Surgical Oncology, EJSO, r-IIS La Fe. Repositorio Institucional de Producción Científica del Instituto de Investigación Sanitaria La Fe, instname
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

Introduction Surgery plays a key role in the management of Neuroblastic tumours (NB), where the standard approach is open surgery, while minimally invasive surgery (MIS) may be considered an option in selected cases. The indication(s) and morbidity of MIS remain undetermined due to small number of reported studies. The aim of this study was to critically address the contemporary indications, morbidity and overall survival (OS) and propose guidelines exploring the utility of MIS for NB. Materials & Methods: A SIOPEN study where data of patients with NB who underwent MIS between 2005 and 2018, including demographics, tumour features, imaging, complications, follow up and survival, were extracted and then analysed. Results A total of 222 patients from 16 centres were identified. The majority were adrenal gland origin (54%) compared to abdominal non-adrenal and pelvic (16%) and thoracic (30%). Complete and near complete macroscopic resection (>95%) was achieved in 95%, with 10% of cases having conversion to open surgery. Complications were reported in 10% within 30 days of surgery. The presence of IDRF (30%) and/or tumour volume >75 ml were risk factors for conversion and complications in multivariate analysis. Overall mortality was 8.5%. Conclusions MIS for NB showed that it is a secure approach allowing more than 95% resection. The presence of IDRFs was not an absolute contraindication for MIS. Conversion to open surgery and overall complication rates were low, however they become significant if tumour volume >75 mL. Based on these data, we propose new MIS guidelines for neuroblastic tumours.

Details

ISSN :
07487983
Volume :
48
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Journal of Surgical Oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5fd5e46733de4f10fc79d3e9029b9538
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejso.2021.08.013