Long-term treatment with a silicone stent was safe and well tolerated in cicatricial tracheal stenoses. This procedure can be considered as a bridge to curative surgery or as a definitive treatment. The latter, generally performed for palliation, may provide satisfactory therapeutic results in selected patients, even in the presence of severe circumferential stenoses.
ACs of the lung are malignant neuroendocrine tumours with a worst outcome in patients over 70 years and in smokers. With the exception of pneumonectomy, the extent of resection does not seem to affect survival and should be accompanied preferably by lymphadenectomy. Pathological staging, along with a mitotic index more than Ki-67 (MIB1), appears to be the most significant prognostic factor at the univariate analysis.
A high prevalence of tumorlets, multiple carcinoids, and lymph-nodal involvement was found in our series. On the basis of these observations bronchial carcinoids always require major surgical procedures with systematic nodal dissection, and a careful search for multifocal lesions should always be performed. Follow-up should always be accurate and protracted, due to the frequency of very long-term relapses (often more than 10 years after surgery).
Primary esophageal closure with tracheal resection/reconstruction seemed to be effective treatment both short and long-term. Systemic conditions, mechanical ventilation, detailed preoperative assessment and appropriate preparation were associated with outcome. Indeed, the 3 patients who had received T-Tube recovered from anastomotic complications.
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