Retrospective Study
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World J Clin Urol. Jul 24, 2014; 3(2): 127-133
Published online Jul 24, 2014. doi: 10.5410/wjcu.v3.i2.127
Cardiopulmonary bypass with brain perfusion for renal cell carcinoma with caval thrombosis
Alessandro Antonelli, Gianluigi Bisleri, Irene Mittino, Annalisa Moggi, Claudio Muneretto, Sergio Cosciani Cunico, Claudio Simeone
Alessandro Antonelli, Irene Mittino, Claudio Muneretto, Sergio Cosciani Cunico, Claudio Simeone, Chair and Division of Urology, Spedali Civili Hospital, University of Brescia, 25127 Brescia, Italy
Gianluigi Bisleri, Annalisa Moggi, Claudio Muneretto, Department of Cardiac Surgery, University of Brescia, Brescia, Italy
Author contributions: Antonelli A, Bisleri G, Muneretto C, Cosciani Cunico S and Simeone C designed the study and took part of the majority of the intervention; Mittino I and Moggi A collected data; Mittino I and Antonelli A wrote the manuscript.
Correspondence to: Alessandro Antonelli, MD, Chair and Division of Urology, Spedali Civili Hospital, University of Brescia, Piazzale Spedali Civili 1, 25127 Brescia, Italy. alxanto@hotmail.com
Telephone: +39-30-3995215 Fax: +39-30-399002
Received: December 17, 2013
Revised: March 4, 2014
Accepted: May 8, 2014
Published online: July 24, 2014
Abstract

AIM: To compare a modified technique preserving brain circulation during cardiopulmonary by-pass (CPB) for radical nephrectomy and caval thrombectomy, to the standard technique.

METHODS: Retrospective evaluation of an institutional database that collects the data of patients submitted to nephrectomy and removal of caval thrombosis with CPB since 1998. In period between 1998 and 2007, CPB followed a standard technique (group sCPB); then, since 2008, a variation in the perfusional technique was introduced, allowing the anterograde perfusion of brain circulation during circulatory arrest (group CPB + BP) with the aim to reduce the risk of ischemic damage to the brain and also the need of deeper hypothermia. Patients (age, gender, comorbidity) and tumor characteristics (side, histology, staging, level of thrombosis), as well as parameters of CPB (times of CPB, aortic clamping and circulatory arrest, minimum temperature reached during hypothermia), intra- and perioperative morbidity (complications in general, bleeding, renal and hepatic failure) and mortality were analyzed and compared between 2 groups (sCPB vs CPB + BP)

RESULTS: The data of 24 patients, respectively 9 in sCPB group and 15 in CPB + BP group, have been reviewed. No differences in the characteristics of patients and tumors were observed. Only 1 (11.1%) and 4 (26.0%) of sCPB and CPB + BP patients, respectively, didn’t experience any event of complication. In sCPB group were observed 15 events of complication (5 of which Clavien ≥ 3, 33% of the events), for a mean of 1.66 events/patient; 29 events (10 Clavien ≥ 3, 30.3%), in the CPB + BP group, for a mean of 2.1 events/patient. 1 (11.1%) and 2 (14.2%) deaths occurred, respectively. For patients submitted to CPB + BP, the minimum temperature reached was significantly higher (29.9 °C vs 26.4 °C, P = 0.001), the time of circulatory arrest was longer (17.4 min vs 13.7 min, NS), but the overall time of CPB shorter (76.1 min vs 92.5 min, NS), albeit these latter differences were not statistically significant. No differences in terms of bleeding, impairment of renal function (post-operative Cr > 2.0 mg/dL respectively in 44.4% vs 35.7% of cases, in the two groups, NS) or hepatic insufficiency (post-operative GOT or GPT > 50 U/L respectively in 44.4% and 66.7% of patients, NS) were noted. Average follow-up was 51 mo in patients undergoing a sCPB and 12 mo in the CPB + BP group of patients; at the last follow-up, 7 patients had died of progression of the condition (4 in the first group and 3 in the second group, respectively), 7 were alive in progression and 10 had no evidence of the disease.

CONCLUSION: The perfusional technique that maintains brain perfusion during circulatory arrest limits hypothermia and lowers time of CPB, without rising the risk of renal and hepatic injury.

Keywords: Renal carcinoma, Vena cava thrombosis, Cardiopulmonary bypass, Cerebral perfusion, Circulatory arrest

Core tip: Surgery for renal cell carcinoma with caval thrombosis extended to the diaphragm or right atrium is burdened by a high risk of complications. The adoption of a modified technique of cardiopulmonary by-pass that maintans the perfusion of brain circulation, doesn’t add morbidity to the procedure and can be in principle of benefit, since it shortens the duration of surgery and requires a less deep hypothermia.