New Advances in Thoracic Surgery: Clinical Diagnosis, Treatment, and Prognosis

A special issue of Diagnostics (ISSN 2075-4418). This special issue belongs to the section "Clinical Diagnosis and Prognosis".

Deadline for manuscript submissions: 31 March 2025 | Viewed by 4785

Special Issue Editor


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Guest Editor
1. Department of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Molise, Campobasso, Italy
2. Thoracic Surgery Unit, Tor Vergata University Hospital, Rome, Italy
Interests: thoracic surgery; lung cancer; pleural diseases; mediastinal diseases

Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

The significant strides made in the last three decades in surgical techniques, medical devices, intraoperative anaesthesiological management and postoperative patient care have affected thoracic surgery more than any other discipline. This has brought about the improvement and the implementation of thoracic surgical care in a growing number of patients who were previously excluded from surgery. The surgical outcome of most cancer diseases even in elderly patients has reached astonishing results. The advent of video-assisted and robotic-assisted thoracic surgery has shortened the hospital length of stay, ameliorated the postoperative outcomes and reduced the incidence of severe complications. The aim of this Special Issue is to provide readers with the most recent updates on the diagnosis, treatment and prognosis of thoracic surgical diseases.

Prof. Dr. Stefano Elia
Guest Editor

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Keywords

  • thoracic surgery
  • lung cancer
  • pleural diseases
  • mediastinal malignancies
  • surgical outcome

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Published Papers (4 papers)

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Research

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11 pages, 605 KiB  
Article
Early Experience with Inner Branch Stent–Graft System for Endovascular Repair of Thoraco-Abdominal and Pararenal Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm
by Simone Cuozzo, Antonio Marzano, Ombretta Martinelli, Jihad Jabbour, Andrea Molinari, Vincenzo Brizzi and Enrico Sbarigia
Diagnostics 2024, 14(23), 2612; https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics14232612 - 21 Nov 2024
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Abstract
Objectives: This study aims to evaluate the technical and clinical outcomes of the E-nside stent graft for thoraco-abdominal aortic aneurysm (TAAA) and pararenal abdominal aortic aneurysm (PAAA) endovascular treatment at our University Hospital Center. Methods: We conducted a retrospective analysis of patients electively [...] Read more.
Objectives: This study aims to evaluate the technical and clinical outcomes of the E-nside stent graft for thoraco-abdominal aortic aneurysm (TAAA) and pararenal abdominal aortic aneurysm (PAAA) endovascular treatment at our University Hospital Center. Methods: We conducted a retrospective analysis of patients electively treated by inner branched EVAR (iBEVAR) between 05/2021 and 03/2023. Demographic, procedural, and clinical data were analyzed. The technical success and clinical outcomes, such as access-site-related complications were reported. The perioperative and early mortality rate, freedom from aortic reintervention, target vessels’ (TVs) patency, and the endoleak rate were evaluated during the follow-up. The technical aspects (external iliac artery diameter, iliac tortuosity, extent of aortic coverage) were retrospectively analyzed. Results: Twenty-two patients were included (age 75.9 ± 5.5; 72.7% male). The aneurism extent was Crawford I = 4 (18.2%), III = 8 (36.4%), IV = 5 (22.7%), V = 1 (4.5%), and PAAA = 4 (18.2%). The mean aortic diameter was 63.5 ± 9.9 mm. The technical success was 95.5% (assisted primary success 100%). The clinical success was 86.4%. The perioperative and early freedom from all-cause mortality rates were 90.9% and 90%, respectively. No case of inter-stage aortic-related mortality was reported, and there was no permanent/temporary spinal cord ischemia (SCI). Seventy-eight out of 81 patent TVs were incorporated through a bridging stent (96.3%). The TV success was 95.1%. The mean external iliac artery (EIA) diameter was 7.5 ± 1.1 mm. Twelve patients (54.5%, including all female patients) were considered outside the instructions for use (IFU) due to narrow iliac arteries. One access-site-related complication was reported. Conclusions: Our experience confirms that E-nside has promising technical and clinical success rates, as well as a low reintervention rate, but it requires a significant compromise of the healthy aortic tissue and adequate iliac arteries that still represents a limitation, especially among women. Mid- to long-term studies and prospective registries are mandatory to evaluate the long-term efficacy and safety, as a comparison between E-nside and other alternative off-the-shelf solutions. Full article
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14 pages, 3027 KiB  
Article
The Naples Prognostic Score Is a Useful Tool to Assess Surgical Treatment in Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer
by Stefano Elia, Alexandro Patirelis, Georgia Hardavella, Antonella Santone, Federica Carlea and Eugenio Pompeo
Diagnostics 2023, 13(24), 3641; https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics13243641 - 12 Dec 2023
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 1170
Abstract
Different prognostic scores have been applied to identify patients with non-small cell lung cancer who have a higher probability of poor outcomes. In this study, we evaluated whether the Naples Prognostic Score, a novel index that considers both inflammatory and nutritional values, was [...] Read more.
Different prognostic scores have been applied to identify patients with non-small cell lung cancer who have a higher probability of poor outcomes. In this study, we evaluated whether the Naples Prognostic Score, a novel index that considers both inflammatory and nutritional values, was associated with long-term survival. This study presents a retrospective propensity score matching analysis of patients who underwent curative surgery for non-small cell lung cancer from January 2016 to December 2021. The score considered the following four pre-operative parameters: the neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio, lymphocyte-to-monocyte ratio, serum albumin, and total cholesterol. The Kaplan–Meier method and Cox regression analysis were performed to evaluate the relationship between the score and disease-free survival, overall survival, and cancer-related survival. A total of 260 patients were selected for the study, though this was reduced to 154 after propensity score matching. Post-propensity Kaplan–Meier analysis showed a significant correlation between the Naples Prognostic Score, overall survival (p = 0.018), and cancer-related survival (p = 0.007). Multivariate Cox regression analysis further validated the score as an independent prognostic indicator for both types of survival (p = 0.007 and p = 0.010, respectively). The Naples Prognostic Score proved to be an easily achievable prognostic factor of long-term survival in patients with non-small cell lung cancer after surgical treatment. Full article
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Review

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24 pages, 4367 KiB  
Review
Primary Cardiac Intimal Sarcoma: Multi-Layered Strategy and Core Role of MDM2 Amplification/Co-Amplification and MDM2 Immunostaining
by Claudiu Nistor, Camelia Stanciu Gavan, Adelina Birceanu, Cezar Betianu, Mara Carsote, Anca-Pati Cucu, Mihaela Stanciu, Florina Ligia Popa, Adrian Ciuche and Mihai-Lucian Ciobica
Diagnostics 2024, 14(9), 919; https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics14090919 - 28 Apr 2024
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 2074 | Correction
Abstract
Primary cardiac tumours are relatively uncommon (75% are benign). Across the other 25%, representing malignant neoplasia, sarcomas account for 75–95%, and primary cardiac intimal sarcoma (PCIS) is one of the rarest findings. We aimed to present a comprehensive review and practical considerations from [...] Read more.
Primary cardiac tumours are relatively uncommon (75% are benign). Across the other 25%, representing malignant neoplasia, sarcomas account for 75–95%, and primary cardiac intimal sarcoma (PCIS) is one of the rarest findings. We aimed to present a comprehensive review and practical considerations from a multidisciplinary perspective with regard to the most recent published data in the specific domain of PCIS. We covered the issues of awareness amid daily practice clinical presentation to ultra-qualified management in order to achieve an adequate diagnosis and prompt intervention, also emphasizing the core role of MDM2 immunostaining and MDM2 genetic analysis. An additional base for practical points was provided by a novel on-point clinical vignette with MDM2-positive status. According to our methods (PubMed database search of full-length, English publications from January 2021 to March 2023), we identified three studies and 23 single case reports represented by 22 adults (male-to-female ratio of 1.2; male population with an average age of 53.75 years, range: 35–81; woman mean age of 55.5 years, range: 34–70) and a 4-year-old child. The tumour-related clinical picture was recognized in a matter of one day to ten months on first admission. These non-specific data (with a very low index of suspicion) included heart failure at least NYHA class II, mitral regurgitation and pulmonary hypertension, acute myocardial infarction, ischemic stroke, obstructive shock, and paroxysmal atrial fibrillation. Awareness might come from other complaints such as (most common) dyspnoea, palpitation, chest pressure, cough, asthenia, sudden fatigue, weakness, malaise, anorexia, weight loss, headache, hyperhidrosis, night sweats, and epigastric pain. Two individuals were initially misdiagnosed as having endocarditis. A history of prior treated non-cardiac malignancy was registered in 3/23 subjects. Distant metastasis as the first step of detection (n = 2/23; specifically, brain and intestinal) or during follow-up (n = 6/23; namely, intestinal, brain and bone, in two cases for each, and adrenal) required additional imagery tools (26% of the patients had distant metastasis). Transoesophageal echocardiography, computed tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imagery, and even 18F-FDG positronic emission tomography-CT (which shows hypermetabolic lesions in PCIS) represent the basis of multimodal tools of investigation. Tumour size varied from 3 cm to ≥9 cm (average largest diameter of 5.5 cm). The most frequent sites were the left atrium followed by the right ventricle and the right atrium. Post-operatory histological confirmation was provided in 20/23 cases and, upon tumour biopsy, in 3/23 of them. The post-surgery maximum free-disease interval was 8 years, the fatal outcome was at the earliest two weeks since initial admission. MDM2 analysis was provided in 7/23 subjects in terms of MDM2-positive status (two out of three subjects) at immunohistochemistry and MDM2 amplification (four out of five subjects) at genetic analysis. Additionally, another three studies addressed PCISs, and two of them offered specific MDM2/MDM2 assays (n = 35 patients with PCISs); among the provided data, we mention that one cohort (n = 20) identified a rate of 55% with regard to MDM2 amplification in intimal sarcomas, and this correlated with a myxoid pattern; another cohort (n = 15) showed that MDM2-positive had a better prognostic than MDM2-negative immunostaining. To summarize, MDM2 amplification and co-amplification, for example, with MDM4, CDK4, HMGA3, CCND3, PDGFRA, TERT, KIT, CCND3, and HDAC9, might improve the diagnosis of PCIS in addition to MDM2 immunostaining since 10–20% of these tumours are MDM2-negative. Further studies are necessary to highlight MDM2 applicability as a prognostic factor and as an element to be taken into account amid multi-layered management in an otherwise very aggressive malignancy. Full article
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Other

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4 pages, 4695 KiB  
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A Rare Endobronchial Tumor in a Pediatric Patient
by Pooja Parekh and Ajay Wagh
Diagnostics 2024, 14(20), 2254; https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics14202254 - 10 Oct 2024
Viewed by 614
Abstract
A pediatric patient who presented with non-specific respiratory symptoms, including mild hemoptysis, wheezing, and eventual respiratory distress, was found to have a rare endobronchial inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor obstructing her right mainstem bronchus. It was diagnosed and initially debulked using bronchoscopy, which helped to [...] Read more.
A pediatric patient who presented with non-specific respiratory symptoms, including mild hemoptysis, wheezing, and eventual respiratory distress, was found to have a rare endobronchial inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor obstructing her right mainstem bronchus. It was diagnosed and initially debulked using bronchoscopy, which helped to stabilize the patient and eliminate the need for supplemental oxygen. The patient subsequently underwent successful removal of the residual tumor with parenchymal-sparing sleeve resection. This case highlights the importance of pursuing appropriate imaging along with diagnostic and therapeutic bronchoscopy for an endobronchial lesion to help manage pediatric patients with persistent respiratory symptoms. Full article
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