Benign Endobronchial Tumors: A Clinicopathologic Review

Purpose: Benign endobronchial tumors are rare entities that can be difficult to diagnose because they often present with non-specific symptoms and vague radiographic findings. The current study reviews the clinical, radiologic and pathologic features, diagnosis, and treatment of patients with benign...

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Main Authors: Joshua E. Insler, Christopher W. Seder, Karina Furlan, Fatima Mir, Vijaya B. Reddy, Paolo Gattuso
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-03-01
Series:Frontiers in Surgery
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fsurg.2021.644656/full
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spelling doaj-442e067e9ea3414eb21ab304511ca0132021-03-05T06:36:56ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Surgery2296-875X2021-03-01810.3389/fsurg.2021.644656644656Benign Endobronchial Tumors: A Clinicopathologic ReviewJoshua E. Insler0Christopher W. Seder1Karina Furlan2Fatima Mir3Vijaya B. Reddy4Paolo Gattuso5Rush Medical College of Rush University Medical Center, Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL, United StatesDepartment of Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery, Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL, United StatesDepartment of Pathology, Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL, United StatesDepartment of Pathology, Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL, United StatesDepartment of Pathology, Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL, United StatesDepartment of Pathology, Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL, United StatesPurpose: Benign endobronchial tumors are rare entities that can be difficult to diagnose because they often present with non-specific symptoms and vague radiographic findings. The current study reviews the clinical, radiologic and pathologic features, diagnosis, and treatment of patients with benign endobronchial tumors.Methods: We examined the charts of all patients who presented with biopsy-proven benign endobronchial tumors at a tertiary-care academic medical center between 1993 and 2018. Pertinent clinicopathologic and radiologic data were analyzed, with particular attention paid to treatment modalities and mean overall patient survival.Results: A total of 28 cases were identified. The most common benign neoplasm was hamartoma (37%), followed by lipoma (19%), squamous papilloma (11%), pleomorphic adenoma (7%), mucin gland adenoma (7%), papillary adenoma (3%), hemangioma (3%), neurofibroma (3%), leiomyoma (3%), and papillomatosis (3%). Cough (58%), shortness of breath (44%), and hemoptysis (15%) were the most frequent presentations. Most cases demonstrated well-defined submucosal or pedunculated endobronchial lesions with segmental pneumonia or atelectasis on imaging. Histologic diagnosis was obtained by endobronchial resection in 43% of patients, thoracoscopic lobectomy in 36%, endobronchial biopsy in 18%, and thoracoscopic wedge resections in 3%. All procedures were performed with no intraoperative or in-hospital deaths (mean overall survival: 20.2 years).Conclusion: Benign endobronchial tumors typically present as well-defined submucosal and/or pedunculated lesions, and may lead to post-obstructive complications. Endobronchial resection is the preferred strategy for diagnosis and treatment of these tumors.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fsurg.2021.644656/fullbenign endobronchial lesionendobronchial tumorhamartomathoracic surgeryleiomyoma
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Joshua E. Insler
Christopher W. Seder
Karina Furlan
Fatima Mir
Vijaya B. Reddy
Paolo Gattuso
spellingShingle Joshua E. Insler
Christopher W. Seder
Karina Furlan
Fatima Mir
Vijaya B. Reddy
Paolo Gattuso
Benign Endobronchial Tumors: A Clinicopathologic Review
Frontiers in Surgery
benign endobronchial lesion
endobronchial tumor
hamartoma
thoracic surgery
leiomyoma
author_facet Joshua E. Insler
Christopher W. Seder
Karina Furlan
Fatima Mir
Vijaya B. Reddy
Paolo Gattuso
author_sort Joshua E. Insler
title Benign Endobronchial Tumors: A Clinicopathologic Review
title_short Benign Endobronchial Tumors: A Clinicopathologic Review
title_full Benign Endobronchial Tumors: A Clinicopathologic Review
title_fullStr Benign Endobronchial Tumors: A Clinicopathologic Review
title_full_unstemmed Benign Endobronchial Tumors: A Clinicopathologic Review
title_sort benign endobronchial tumors: a clinicopathologic review
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Surgery
issn 2296-875X
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Purpose: Benign endobronchial tumors are rare entities that can be difficult to diagnose because they often present with non-specific symptoms and vague radiographic findings. The current study reviews the clinical, radiologic and pathologic features, diagnosis, and treatment of patients with benign endobronchial tumors.Methods: We examined the charts of all patients who presented with biopsy-proven benign endobronchial tumors at a tertiary-care academic medical center between 1993 and 2018. Pertinent clinicopathologic and radiologic data were analyzed, with particular attention paid to treatment modalities and mean overall patient survival.Results: A total of 28 cases were identified. The most common benign neoplasm was hamartoma (37%), followed by lipoma (19%), squamous papilloma (11%), pleomorphic adenoma (7%), mucin gland adenoma (7%), papillary adenoma (3%), hemangioma (3%), neurofibroma (3%), leiomyoma (3%), and papillomatosis (3%). Cough (58%), shortness of breath (44%), and hemoptysis (15%) were the most frequent presentations. Most cases demonstrated well-defined submucosal or pedunculated endobronchial lesions with segmental pneumonia or atelectasis on imaging. Histologic diagnosis was obtained by endobronchial resection in 43% of patients, thoracoscopic lobectomy in 36%, endobronchial biopsy in 18%, and thoracoscopic wedge resections in 3%. All procedures were performed with no intraoperative or in-hospital deaths (mean overall survival: 20.2 years).Conclusion: Benign endobronchial tumors typically present as well-defined submucosal and/or pedunculated lesions, and may lead to post-obstructive complications. Endobronchial resection is the preferred strategy for diagnosis and treatment of these tumors.
topic benign endobronchial lesion
endobronchial tumor
hamartoma
thoracic surgery
leiomyoma
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fsurg.2021.644656/full
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