When talking about lung cancer, it is important to recognize this as the first cause of death of neoplastic origin. The detection of this in early stages has made the emergence of ground glass opacity (GGO) more frequent due to the establishment of lung cancer screening programs, allowing the reduction of morbidity and mortality caused by the same and achieving a curative treatment of it. The management of multiple GGOs depends much on the characteristics of these, however, being multiple and contralateral should be considered surgical resection, always taking into account the stage of the dominant lesion. In this article, we present a case of a 60 years old woman with a bilateral GGO lesions located in segment 3 on both sides. A bilateral uniportal video-assisted thoracic surgery (VATS) anatomic segmentectomy S3 of both lesions was performed in a single stage surgery. The postoperative course of the patient was uneventful.
ProcedureUnder general anesthesia and left lateral decubitus position, a right uniportal VATS approach through a 3-cm incision was performed. Firstly, we dissected the right upper lobe vein and anterior arterial trunk. We proceeded to open the minor fissure, identification of the vessels of S3; V3 and A3 both with two branches (V3a, V3b, A3a and A3b respectively) ( Figure 2A), ligation with silk and vascular clips and division of B3 with endo-staplers. In this side, we completed the segmentectomy cutting the parenchyma with endo-staplers. A chest tube (18 french) was placed at the end of the procedure. The patient was turned to a right lateral decubitus position and a 3-cm incision was performed on the left side, fifth intercostal space, middle axillary line. A left uniportal VATS anatomic segmentectomy S3 was performed. We started opening the pleura over the vessels in the left upper lobe. The we dissected and ligated V3 and then the B3 was dissected and divided with an endostapler ( Figure 2B) This maneuver exposed the artery of the segment (A3) and was divided like in the right side. The inflation and deflation of the lung to demark the limits of the segment was the last step. It was finalized by cutting the lung parenchyma following this landmarks and leaving the distal stump on the resected segment. Hemostasis was proved, and air leak excluded in both sides. We placed 18F chest tube and the wound was closed. The estimated blood loss during the surgery was 50 mL and the total surgical time for both procedures was 90 minutes (Figure 3).
Post-operative managementThe post-operative course of the patient was successful without complications. The management of the pain was with patients controlled analgesia (PCA). The post-operative X-ray showed complete expanded lungs without complications (Figure 4). The chest tubes were removed in the 3rd day post-operatory ( Figure 5), and the patient was discharged the same day without complications.The paraffin biopsy results were in the right anterior segment: the bigger one was invasive adenocarcinoma, with 3 cm of margin. In the left anteri...