World Journal of Surgical Oncology (Aug 2024)

Combined use of composite mesh and acellular dermal matrix graft for abdominal wall repair following tumour resection

  • Juan Ángel Fernández,
  • Felipe Alconchel,
  • María Dolores Frutos,
  • Elena Gil,
  • Paula Gómez-Valles,
  • Beatriz Gómez,
  • Clemente Fernández-Pascual,
  • Fulgencio Muñoz-Romero,
  • Pablo Puertas,
  • Antonio Valcárcel,
  • Jerónimo García

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12957-024-03507-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract Background Surgeries for sarcomas in the abdominal wall require wide resections, often radical en bloc resections, which generate major defects involving a very complex repair. The combined use of porcine dermal xenografts, together with composite meshes, may assist in the repair of these defects with minimal complications. Method We present a series of 19 patients (10 males and 9 females), with a mean age of 53.2 years (range: 11–86 years) treated in the Sarcoma Unit of the Virgen de la Arrixaca University Hospital from January 2015 to December 2021. Histopathologically, there were four chondrosarcomas (21%), three Ewing sarcomas (15.7%), two desmoid tumours (10.5%), two undifferentiated pleomorphic sarcomas (10.5%), two well-differentiated liposarcomas (10.5%), two leiomyosarcomas (10.5%), one synovial sarcoma, one dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans, one fibromyxoid sarcoma (or Evans tumour), and one metastasis from an adenocarcinoma of unknown origin. All the patients were resected following surgical oncology principles and reconstructed by means of the combined use of a composite mesh acting as a neoperitoneum and a porcine dermal xenograft acting as an abdominal neofascia. Results The mean size of the defects generated after surgery for tumour excision was 262.8 cm2 (range: 150–600 cm2). After a mean follow-up of 38 months, six patients (31.5%) developed complications—two cases of wound dehiscence, one case of surgical wound infection, one case of graft partial necrosis, one case of anastomotic leak and one death due to multiorgan failure secondary to massive bronchoaspiration. Conclusion Surgeries for sarcomas of the abdominal wall require wide oncological resections, which generate major abdominal wall defects. The repair of these defects by means of the combined use of synthetic and biological meshes is a technique associated with minimal complications and excellent medium-term results.

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