Abstract

Background: The effects of medical pre-treatment prior to surgical excision of infantile hemangiomas (IH) remains understudied. We hypothesized that medical pretreatment may improve outcomes after surgical excision. This study aimed to evaluate the difference in surgical outcomes/complications between direct to surgery (NPT) versus medical pre-treatment prior to surgery (PT). Methods: A retrospective study was conducted at a pediatric tertiary center between 2007 and 2018. Children 0 and 18 years who underwent surgical resection (confirmed GLUT-1 positive IH) were included. Visceral and congenital hemangiomas, PHACE, and vascular malformations/neoplasms were excluded. Pre-treatment was the primary predictor for post-surgical complications. Literature meta-analysis was also performed. Results: Our institution identified 185 IH patients, 85 (46%) underwent surgical resection. Of these, n = 28, (32.9%) had pre-treatment (PT) (8.24% propranolol, 9.41% topical timolol, 12.94% steroids, 2.35% laser); n = 57, (67.1%) had no pre-treatment (NPT). Pre-surgical lesion size was comparable ( P = .829). Surgical outcomes between PT and NPT were comparable for wound dehiscence, infection, scarring, and repeat surgery ( P = .162, 1.0, 1.0, 0.483), including pooled complications ( P = .448). Where documented, PT had higher functional improvement ( P = .039). Results were comparable when selecting for beta-blockers versus NPT. Meta-analysis included 7 studies and 169 patients, 39.1% PT and 68.1% NPT. The most common PT was systemic/intralesional steroids. Five received beta-blockers. All patients had functional improvement where recorded. Complications were slightly higher for PT ( P = .041). Conclusion: The incidence of surgical complications is comparable between direct to surgery and medical pre-treatment patients. Early surgical management without pre-treatment was not associated with improved complications/outcomes except select subgroup analysis identified improved functional outcomes with pre-treatment. Future directions include defining appropriate candidates for early direct to surgery versus best candidates for medical pre-treatment using patient specific variables.

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