The development of uniportal video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery in São Paulo: from diagnosis to lobectomy
Introduction
Since video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS) gained a remarkable place in thoracic surgery, many surgeons started to search, increasingly, for innovations of this technique. Naturally, as years passed, thoracic surgeons realized that the same procedure can be performed with two incisions unlike the classic VATS, which was initially performed with three or four incisions (1-3).
The first cases of uniportal surgery in thoracic sympathectomy reported in 2002 and one of the cases of uniportal VATS in wedge pulmonary resections that were reported by Dr. Rocco from the National Cancer Institute in Naples, Italy, the surgical treatment of pneumothorax, pleural diagnosis, and mediastinal staging motivated us to follow on the uniportal VATS surgical journey (4,5). Following this thoughts, we aimed to identify all of the benefits of using the least number of incisions for the thoracic wall, including less postoperative pain, shorter hospitalization time, better esthetic results, high patient satisfaction, and early return to daily activities (6,7).
Rivas’s publications on the biggest pulmonary resections such as lobectomies, pneumonectomies, and bronchoplasty, followed by the important results obtained by the Shanghai group from the Pulmonary Hospital of Tongji University, spread throughout the world, encouraging our department to naturally follow the complex procedures performed with the uniportal technique and presenting the same results as those with using VATS with more than one incision (8-11).
That being said, the main goal of this article was to describe the evolution of uniportal surgery that took place in the largest private hospital of Latin America, which is located in São Paulo, Brazil; the difficulties encountered; and the advantages and benefits the method brought to our institution and city.
Methods
Patients
A descriptive and retrospective study was conducted with patients who underwent uniportal VATS at the thoracic surgical department of Beneficencia Portuguesa Hospital, São Paulo, Brazil, who were referred to our team with an indication to undergo the aforementioned procedure between February 2012 and March 2016. This highlights the evolution of the uniportal surgery in the city of São Paulo. All of the patients provided written consent before undergoing the operation, in accordance with the guidelines of the medical ethics committee of our institution.
Surgical technique
Aside from the sympathectomy cases, all uniportal VATS procedures were performed with the patient under general anesthesia and in the total lateral decubitus position, with single-lung ventilation and similar preparation as that for posterolateral thoracotomy. A 3 to 6 cm incision was made, and a small (2.5–6 cm) wound protector (Alexis, Applied Medical, CA, USA) was placed. A 5 or 10 mm 30° scope camera was introduced. Then, an initial thoracoscopy was performed in all of the cases to help with the adaptation of the surgical team to the uniportal technique. No other incision was made, and the cavity was drained through the access incision with a 24-F tubular chest drain (Figure 1).
The patients who were to undergo sympathectomy were intubated with a normal tube and placed in the semi-seated position with their arms opened. Exclusively in these cases, we used a 5.5 mm trocar next to the axillary region through the single access and performed the procedure (Figure 2).
Statistical analysis
Categorical variables are reported as n (%). Continuous variables are expressed as mean ± SD or median depending on the distribution of the variables. Analyses were conducted by using the statistical package SAS University Edition 9.4 for OS X (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC, USA).
Results
From January 2012 to March 2016, we performed 454 uniportal surgeries at the thoracic surgical department of Beneficencia Portuguesa Hospital, São Paulo, Brazil. The first 47 cases were sympathectomies. Of the patients, 287 (65.52%) were male and 151 (34.48%) were female, with a mean age of 57.48±23 years. The procedures performed were divided into minor and major procedure groups (Table 1).
Full table
In December 2014, we initiated the anatomical pulmonary resection cases (lobectomies and segmentectomies) (Figure 3). In the uniportal lobectomies performed for lung cancer in the initial staging, lymphadenectomy was performed in all of the patients. In 59 cases (87%), >7 lymph nodes were included in the dissection and confirmed in the pathological anatomy report.
Histological data showed that mediastinal mass resection was performed for thymomas in 4 cases (68%), thymic hyperplasia in 1 case (16%), and lymphoma in 1 case (16%).
Perioperative complications and mortality
Four lobectomy cases were converted to thoracotomy because of bleeding. One patient needed blood transfusion and vasoactive drug administration in the intensive care unit (ICU) but was discharged from the ICU on the sixth postoperative day (Table 2). No operative or perioperative mortality related to the procedure occurred.
Full table
Postoperative management
The chest tube drainage was removed when the secretion volume was <150 mL. When used, the chest tube was removed after a mean of 3.6±2.4 days. Among the patients who underwent a lobectomy, four needed thoracentesis after drainage removal because of the high volume of pleural effusion detected on chest radiography. Three patients required insertion of a pleural drainage tube with a pigtail catheter for pneumothorax that occurred after the removal of the tubular chest drain (Table 2). No infections where observed in any of the cases. The mean hospital length of stay was 7.4±4.3 days.
Discussion
Since 2012, the number of surgeries performed with the uniportal technique has increased gradually in spite of its complexity and comprehensiveness. We initiated sympathectomy by using the uniportal technique with 5 mm 30° fiber optics.
Confident with the cavity visualization after several procedures to gain access in the sympathetic thoracic chain (sympathectomies), we started to use the uniportal access to diagnose cases and treat pleural collection pathologies such as pleural effusion (recurrent or primary oncological), pleural metastasis, and definitive spontaneous pneumothorax and hemothorax by closed chest trauma or by postoperative complications in cardiac surgeries.
As our team was involved in the major pulmonary resections with two incisions (one for the camera and the other as utility incision), training centers for uniportal surgeries began emerging, with the Pulmonary Hospital in Shanghai (Tongji University) as the main center.
Apart from being encouraged by the results of the above-mentioned smaller procedures, the surgical team lacked the security of seeing an entire department perform major and complex pulmonary resections of the most varied kinds. This need was met after we participated in the first class of the Shanghai Uniportal VATS training program. After the training, we adjusted the surgical staff’s positioning in the operational field and the choices of surgical nurses. In addition, we had the opportunity to help in designing an instrument to help in vessel dissection and called it “snake” (Figure 4). With all this improvement, we found a significant decrease in lobectomy time after the eighth case, which decreased from 180±31.5 to 120±30.4 minutes. Today, after performing 50 lobectomy cases, we can complete a uniportal lobectomy with a naturally regular anatomy in around 80–100 minutes.
This improvement in our technique to perform uniportal VATS relieved the fatigue of the surgical team, which could lead to the abandonment of a new technique when the learning curve promotes stress on the surgeon.
An important detail was observed in our learning curve regarding patients with obesity. During minor uniportal VATS procedures, these patients developed hypoxemia with one-lung ventilation. In these cases, our department chose not to indicate uniportal major procedures such as lobectomy for patients with a body mass index of >35 kg/m2.
In current publications, uniportal VATS lobectomy has proven to be equivalent to multiport thoracoscopic lobectomy in terms of perioperative and postoperative results, with the possible advantages of better pain control and early mobilization of the patient, which we also verified in our patients (12). Similarly, as in our study, the decreases in the amount of time required to attain permanency of pleural drainage and in hospitalization time after uniportal VATS were also shown in some studies (13-15).
As noted by various authors, surgical time was also significantly reduced with the best positioning of the surgical team in the field and better handling of the pulmonary hilum, which is easily observed when performing a dissection with the camera view introduced through a uniportal access (16,17).
We believe that training centers and high-standard teaching courses such as the one offered by Charité Hospital of the University of Berlin as the third International Uniportal VATS course, with practical laboratories and non-human live specimens would help promote the professional education of thoracic surgeons who desire to launch their careers and excel in uniportal surgery, specifically in anatomical resections such as lobectomy and segmentectomy.
Today, in our institution, we can safely offer uniportal surgery as the first-choice surgical treatment for patients with early-stage lung cancer and thereby provide patients a shorter recovery time, less postoperative pain, and shorter hospitalization time.
Conclusions
The uniportal surgery performed by our department in São Paulo represents a breakthrough in the surgical treatment of thoracic pathologies in Southeast Brazil. Its evolution significantly reduced patients’ postoperative pain. The technique can be performed safely by members of a well-trained surgical team who are familiarized with the method.
Acknowledgements
We thank Diego Gonzalez-Rivas and Mahmoud Ismail for introducing us to the field of uniportal VAST.
Footnote
Conflicts of Interest: The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.
Ethical Statement: The study was approved by the ethnical committee in Federal University of São Paulo (register number CT2016/84). Written informed consent was obtained from the patient.
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