Title: November 16, 2006
1Joint Medicine-Surgery Conference
2Learning Objectives
- Evaluation and management of the patient with a
gallbladder mass - Peri-operative management of the patient with a
recent coronary stent - Peri-operative management of the patient with a
recent NSTEMI
3Case
- The patient is a 51 year old Bangladeshi woman
with a history of type 2 diabetes on oral agents
and stable angina - April 8, 2006 presented to Bellevue with a
NSTEMI, peak troponin 0.45 mg/dl. - Cardiac cath revealed severe obstructions of the
proximal and mid LAD which were both successfully
stented with drug- eluting sirolimus/Cypher
stents - April 25 Pt electively underwent a staged
intervention of a severe RCA lesion with a Cypher
stent
4Case
- May 20 Pt presented with acute pancreatitis.
- Amylase 1409, lipase 9896
- AST 627, ALT 422, AlkP 166, Tbil 1.3, Dbil 0.8
- Imaging was perfomed
5Gallbladder MassPresentation
- Often presents with typical biliary symptoms
- Biliary colic
- Acute cholecystitis
- Obstructive jaundice
- Incidental finding on imaging
- 1 cm is an often-used cutoff for intervention
- Asymmetrical GB wall thickening
- Role of doppler imaging
6Gallbladder MassDifferential Diagnosis
- Gallstones
- Gallbladder polyp
- Mucosal lesion
- Cholesterol polyp
- Adenomyomatosis
- Adenocarcinoma
- Metastatic cancer
- Melanoma most common
- Cholangiocarcinoma
7Gallbladder MassRisk Factors for Cancer
- Gallstones
- Present in 74-92 if patients with cancer
- Single large stone
- Porcelain gallbladder
- Chronic cholecystitits
- Premalignant epithelial changes
- Biliary Salmonella typhi infection
- Biliary adenomas
- Choledochal cysts
http//www.uhrad.com/ctarc/ct186a2.jpg
8Adenocarcinoma of Gallbladder
- Rapidly fatal disease
- Resection only hope for cure
- Liver resection if T2-T4
- 30-40 candidates for resection
- 5 year survival
- 5-10 overall
- 38 if resected
- 85-100 for T1
- 30-40 for T2 (80 to 90 with radical resection
in highly selected patients) - T and N status predict survival
- R0 resection predicts survival
Fong, et al. Annals of Surgery 232 557 2000
9Gallbladder MassManagement
- Imaging
- Sonogram
- CT scan
- Biopsy
- Rarely indicated as it wont change management
- Perform if unresectable malignancy
- Cholecystectomy
- Laparosopic
- If suspicion for malignancy is low
- Must plan for potential liver bed resection
- 10-15 port site recurrence
- Open
- Indicated for malignancy to minimize abdominal
wall recurrence - Liver resection for T2-T4
- T1 disease does not benefit from extended
resection
10Hepatobiliary Surgery and Antiplatelet Therapy
- Raw liver surface at risk for hemorrhage
- Hemostasis may be technically challenging
- Argon laser coagulation
- Thermal coagulation
- Topical agents
- Patients with liver dysfunction due to cirrhosis
or biliary obstruction may be coagulopathic
11Medical Consult
- Surgery imposes multiple risks for perioperative
cardiac complications - Hypercoaguable state
- Stress-induced ischemia
- This will compound the risk of being off
antiplatelet therapy, particualrly clopidogrel,
following drug-eluting stent (DES) implantation. - What is the optimal perioperative management
following recent DES implantation and NSTEMI?
12Endothelialization of DES following PCI
- Angioplasty and stenting ? neointimal hyperplasia
secondary to smooth muscle infiltration and
endothelial cell proliferation ? Restenosis. - Elution of sirolimus or paclitaxel ? inhibits
both smooth muscle and endothelial cell division. - Decreased rate of re-endothelialization ? exposed
struts of stent ? Thrombus formation.
13Shuchman M.NEJM.2006.355.1949-52.
14Recommended Courses of Antiplatelet Agents
- Antiplatelet agents should be continued until a
stent is re-endothelialized. - ACC/AHA recommended course of clopidogrel
- Bare metal 6 weeks
- Cyper/sirolimus 3 months
- Taxus/paclitaxel 6 months
- Aspirin should be continued indefinitely.
15Clinical Outcome of Patients Undergoing
Non-Cardiac Surgery in the Two Months Following
Coronary Stenting
- Methods Retrospective review of 207 patients who
underwent non-cardiac surgery within 2 mos.
following bare metal stent implanatation. - Results 8 patients (4) had MI or in-stent
thrombosis when lt6 wks post-PCI. No events
occurred at gt7 wks post-PCI. - Conclusions When possible non-cardiac surgery
should be delayed for at least 6 wks post-PCI. - Wilson SH, et al.JACC.200342234-40.
16Perioperaitve Risk after Recent PCI
- Kaluza GI, et al. JACC. 2000351288-94.
- 40 patients with PCI lt6 wks before noncardiac
surgery, - 7 MI and 8 deaths. All deaths and MIs occurred
when surgery was lt14d from stenting. 4 patients
expired after undergoing surgery one day after
stenting. - Reddy PR Vaitkus PT. Am J Cardiol 200595755-7.
- Retrospective analysis of 56 consecutive cases of
PCI followed by noncardiac surgery. - No patient developed a major cardiac event if
surgery occurred gt42 days after stenting.
17Bridging with Heparin
- Vicenzi MN,et al.Br J Anaesth.200696686-93.
- Prospective observational study of 103 patients
with PCI (bare metal or DES) lt1y prior to
non-cardiac surgery. Perioperative heparin was
administered to all patients. - 4.9 overall mortality. 44.7 suffered
perioperative complications. All but two adverse
events were cardiac. - Event rate 2 fold greater in patients with recent
stents (lt35d compared with gt90d before surgery)..
18Drug-Eluting Stents
- No specific data are avaliable on the
perioperative management of patients with
drug-eluting stents. - Recommendations are based on expert opinion.
19Perioperative Management of Drug-Eluting Stents
- Following the surgical assessment of potential
bleeding complications antiplatelet regimens may
be based on cardiovascular risk - Lower-Risk Patients
- Low dose Aspirin
- Low dose clopridigrel
- Higher-Risk Patients recent drug-eluting stent,
history of in-stent thrombosis, unprotected
left-main or bifurcation stenting - Glycoprotein IIB/IIIA inhibitor as bridge
therapy - Auerbach A, Goldman L.Circulation.20061131361-76
.
20Risk of Non-Cardiac Surgery in Patients with a
Recent MI
- Acute MI (lt7d) or Recent MI (gt7d but lt1mo.) with
evidence of ischemic risk are major predictors of
perioperative cardiovascular events. - AHA/ACC guidelines recommend waiting 4-6 weeks
before elective surgery in patients following MI
without evidence of significant residual
myocardium at risk. - There are no specific trials in the literature
addressing the optimal waiting period. - Eagle, KA,et al.JACC.200239543-53.
21Perioperative Risk Reduction For Cardiovascular
Events in Patients with Recent MI
- ?-Blockers
- Statins
- Usual cardiac care
- Initiation of antiplatelet agents as soon as
bleeding risk is acceptably low - Blood pressure control
- Oxygen
- Pain control
22?-Blockers
- Available evidence on outcomes is mixed
- Less than 1100 patients have been randomized in
clinical trials. - The largest retrospective review to date
suggested that patients with higher perioperative
risk may benefit while those at low risk may be
harmed.
23Lindenauer NEJM 2005 Retrospective study of a
large, multicenter administrative database.
24?-Blockers
- Patient Selection
- Identify those at highest risk of perioperative
cardiovascular complications. - Caution with heart failure
- Agents and Administration
- Use ?-1 selective agents (metoprolol, atenolol)
- Start up to 1 mo. before surgery if possible and
continue through the post-operative period - May use IV formulations perioperatively
- Target HR
- 60 BPM (blood pressure permitting)
25Statins
- The literature regarding perioperative statin use
is primarily from observational studies and 1
small randomized trial. - The current avaliable evidence does not support
starting statins in patients without a long-term
indication. - Auerbach A, Goldman L. Circulation.2006113(10)13
61-76.
26Case
- Plan was for three months (from April 25) of ASA
and clopidogrel, 5 days off both meds, then
surgery. - July 5 Pt developed obstructive jaundice
- July 25 ERCP performed with sphincterotomy and
sludge removal
27Case
- August 3 Open cholecystectomy with wedge liver
biopsy performed - Intraoperative biopsy did not reveal carcinoma
- Final pathology c/w T2 gallbladder adenocarcinoma
- August 31 Liver resection and lymph node
dissection performed (0/7 LN)
28Case
- Ultimate diagnosis stage IB gallbladder cancer
T2 N0 M0 - Being evaluated for chemoradiation
29Summary Learning ObjectivesGallbladder lesions
- Differential diagnosis
- Polyp, stone, adenomyomatosis, adenocarcinoma
- Timing of surgery
- Suspicion of adenocarcinoma warrants early
intervention for chance of cure given aggressive
disease biology
30SummaryLearning ObjectivesStents and
non-cardiac surgery
- Risk of in-stent thrombosis is high
peri-operatively if antiplatelet agents are
removed prior to endothelialization of stents - Consider nature of surgical procedure and risk of
bleeding and challenges with hemostasis - Recommended course of clopidogrel
- Bare metal 6 weeks
- Cyper/sirolium 3 months
- Taxus/paclitaxel 6 months
- Bridge with heparin or gp IIb/IIIa inhibitors
31SummaryLearning ObjectivesPeri-operative
management of recent MI
- Delay/cancel surgery if possible
- Aggressive beta-blockade
- Consider statins
- Usual cardiac care including oxygen, pain
control, and initiation of antiplatelet agents as
soon as bleeding risk is acceptably low
32- Thank you,
- and stay tuned for the next
- Joint
- Medicine-Surgery
- Conference