Desmoid tumor surgery

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Desmoid tumor Microchapters

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Differentiating Desmoid tumor from other Diseases

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Case Studies

Case #1

Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1] Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Sara Mohsin, M.D.[2]Faizan Sheraz, M.D. [3]

Overview

Surgical resection is not recommended among patients with advanced or metastatic malignancy.[1]

Surgery

  • Surgical resection is not recommended among patients with advanced or metastatic malignancy[1]
  • Desmoid tumor does not have any propensity for metastasis although it may aggressively invade structures
  • The optimal management for aggressive fibromatosis depends on tumor location and extent

Goals of surgery

  • The goals of surgery are twofold:
    • To remove the tumor
    • To restore function at the site of the tumor
  • Surgical resection may be offered although the likelihood of local recurrence after surgery is high, particularly if margins are positive
  • Wide local excision with a grossly negative microscopic margin followed by reconstruction of the defect is the standard surgical goal
    • Reconstruction may include:
      • Skin graft (from patient's own thigh or buttocks to cover and protect the area where the tumor was removed)
      • Rotational muscle flap (taken from patient's own muscle near the surgery site, and rotated to fill the area where the tumor was removed)
      • Free muscle flap (muscle is taken from somewhere else in the patient's own body, relocated, and then reconnected with the blood vessels in the area where the tumor was removed)
  • Full-thickness resection of the tumor-containing abdominal wall with a grossly negative microscopic margin has to be performed when the lesion closely approximates or involves the peritoneum
  • Abdominal wall resection may be required to close the defect and minimize the risk of hernias after resection of abdominal wall desmoids
  • As intraabdominal desmoids usually involve the mesentery, so the resection generally requires concomitant bowel resection
  • Surgeon must take care not to compromise the superior mesenteric artery or vein during resection
  • Given the propensity of desmoids to recur, reconstruction should allow for the possibility of future resections and reconstructions
  • Intraperitoneal organs or adjacent bony structures involved by tumor must be resected as well
  • Incomplete tumor removal or involved excision margins may lead to local recurrence
  • It is estimated that 25 to 40% of patients who undergo surgery can have a local recurrence
  • Because of high recurrence rate even after being successfully treated, it is necessary for the patient to keep seeing a physician regularly for follow up vists
  • Imaging of the tumor site with ultrasound or MRI scans may be recommended to closely monitor patient’s health on follow up visits

Reference

  1. 1.0 1.1 Economou, Athanasios; Pitta, Xanthi; Andreadis, Efstathios; Papapavlou, Leonidas; Chrissidis, Thomas (2011). "Desmoid tumor of the abdominal wall: a case report". Journal of Medical Case Reports. 5 (1): 326. doi:10.1186/1752-1947-5-326. ISSN 1752-1947.

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