STS E Book - Chest Wall and Sternum Resection and Reconstruction Flashcards
What must be ruled out in the differential if suspicious of a primary chest wall neoplasm?
I.E. What are more common diagnoses with a similar presentation?
Healing rib fracture and metastatic lesion - far more prevalent than all primary chest wall neoplasms combined.
Ask about trauma and other oncology history.
In doing an incisional biopsy of a possible soft tissue chest wall neoplasm, how much skin needs to be accounted for in a resection if complete surgical excision becomes necessary?
5 cm of clear skin
What margin is needed for a chondrosarcoma of the chest?
4 cm of healthy tissue around the tumor is the best way to eliminate local recurrence
What is the most common primary chest wall malignancy?
chondrosarcoma
What is the efficacy of neo/adj chemo and/or radiation on chondrosarcoma?
resistant to both; the treatment is radical resection with 5cm margins
What is survival most related to in a chest wall malignancy?
Histological grade and size, and to the adequacy of resection.
Grade 1 - 70% 10-year survival.
<6 cm lesion size (greatest dimension) - 87% 10-year survival.
When resecting recurrent chest wall neoplasm visible on the skin after radiation, what is the principle of the resection margin?
Margin of the skin showing any radiation change should be resected - even if the defect is large; healing is better if flaps are approximated to healthy tissues.
How are primary fibrosarcomas of the chest wall usually treated?
aggressive surgical resection, most chemo agents have relatively little effect, some effect with radiotherapy for lower grade fibrosarcomas (desmoids)