A comprehensive overview on the surgical management of secondary lymphedema of the upper and lower extremities related to prior oncologic therapies

Ramon Garza, Roman Skoracki, Karen Hock and Stephen P. Povoski. Garza et al. BMC Cancer (2017) 17:468

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A comprehensive overview on the surgical management of secondary lymphedema of the upper and lower extremities related to prior oncologic therapies.

Ramon Garza, Roman Skoracki, Karen Hock and Stephen P. Povoski. Garza et al. BMC Cancer (2017) 17:468

Secondary lymphedema of the upper and lower extremities related to prior oncologic therapies, including cancer surgeries, radiation therapy, and chemotherapy, is a major cause of long-term morbidity in cancer patients. For the upper extremities, it is most commonly associated with prior oncologic therapies for breast cancer, while for the lower extremities, it is most commonly associated with oncologic therapies for gynecologic cancers, urologic cancers, melanoma, and lymphoma. Both non-surgical and surgical management strategies have been developed and utilized, with the primary goal of all management strategies being volume reduction of the affected extremity, improvement in patient symptomology, and the reduction/elimination of resultant extremity-related morbidities, including recurrent infections. Surgical management strategies include: (i) ablative surgical methods (i.e., Charles procedure, suction-assisted lipectomy/liposuction) and (ii) physiologic surgical methods (i.e., lymphaticolymphatic bypass, lymphaticovenular anastomosis, vascularized lymph node transfer, vascularized omental flap transfer). While these surgical management strategies can result in dramatic improvement in extremity-related symptomology and improve quality of life for these cancer patients, many formidable challenges remain for successful management of secondary lymphedema. It is hopeful that ongoing clinical research efforts will ultimately lead to more complete and sustainable treatment strategies and perhaps a cure for secondary lymphedema and its devastating resultant morbidities.

Main findings

  • This paper firstly provides a limited overview of current non-surgical management strategies.
  • Surgical procedures discussed are divided into:
    • Ablative surgical methods – Charles procedure, dermal flaps, lipectomy/liposuction.
    • Physiologic surgical methods – lymphaticolymphatic bypass, lymphaticovenular anastomosis (LVA), vascularized lymph node transfer (VLNT), vascularized omental flap transfer, simultaneous microsurgery breast reconstruction and vascularized lymph node transfer.
  • It also considered the role of genetics to assist with identifying and intervening early and also whether surgery should be attempted early when lymphatic vessels are still patent. Currently surgery is usually considered after conservative management.