@Oxford OLP
Sep 26
Second day of #ESL Genoa 2014. Early start - I think most people are still enjoying an Italian breakfast! Surgeons are here... #lymphedema
Pierre Bourgeois talking on #Lymphedema #prevention. Screening and early microsurgery is very important
Johansson: MLD not really effective for preventing #Lymphedema #Microsurgery has been shown to be effective in preventing lymphoedema
The big theme of day 2 of the ESL meeting in Genoa was early detection and prevention of lymphoedema. This is a topic that I find fascinating, and incredibly important.
I see in my patients the difficulties of living with lymphoedema on a daily basis, and how it affects their quality of life. For some, they hate the stigma of wearing compression garments, the questions in the supermarket, the constant reminder of their cancer treatment. For others, they just want to get their favourite pair of boots on. Others have more physical symptoms – heaviness, decreased movement, recurrent infections. If we could prevent this from happening, we would greatly increase the quality of life of thousands of cancer survivors.
Conservative measures (such as compression garments and MLD) are important in the everyday management of established lymphoedema, but can they prevent lymphoedema from happening? Unfortunately, the answer to this question appears to be no. Karin Johannon from Lund, Sweden presented data on early detection of breast cancer related lymphoedema. She said that MLD was not effective in preventing lymphoedema. Compression garments managed to control lymphoedema in the majority of patients detected early, but as I have posted before, many patients don’t like wearing their garments, so we need to find a better solution, and early microsurgery seems to be the way forward.
Pierre Bourgois is from Brussels. He presented on early detection of lymphoedema using Indocyanine Green Lymphography (ICG scan). This is a technique we use in our clinic. A simple injection of green dye in the foot or the wrist, followed by scanning in the clinic room using a special infra-red camera is invaluable for mapping lymphatics and detecting early lymphatic dysfunction. It is also vital for planning surgery. It is painless and does not involve radioactivity like lymphoscintigraphy.
We offer a service where we can screen patients at risk of lymphoedema after their cancer treatment, and then intervene when they show the earliest signs of lymphoedema, even before they know that their limb is swollen. This can prevent the progressive changes that happen in the lymphatics with lymphoedema, and prevent the swelling form happening. This means that patients can avoid compression, MLD, and the complications of lymphoedema, like multiple infections.
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