Abstract

BackgroundRadiation therapy has proven efficacy for cancer treatment but is not without short- and long-term side effects, including radiation-induced lymphedema. There has been limited evidence on the secondary effects of prior radiation therapy on shoulder surgery. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the short-term outcomes of shoulder arthroplasty and rotator cuff repair (RCR) in patients who have undergone ipsilateral radiation therapy and/or have preoperative upper extremity lymphedema. MethodsDuke Enterprise Data Unified Content Explorer was used to query for patients who underwent RCR at our institution. Patients with radiation therapy for breast or lung cancer prior to ipsilateral RCR or shoulder arthroplasty were included. Patients with less than 2 years of follow-up were excluded. Data variables included primary tumor type, dates of cancer diagnoses, radiation treatment, axillary lymph node dissection (aLND), presence of lymphedema, index shoulder operations, most recent follow-up, and surgical and medical complications within the 90-day postoperative period. Additional oncologic variables included total Gray (Gy) delivered. ResultsTwenty-one patients underwent radiation therapy and subsequent shoulder arthroplasty or RCR (13 RCR, 3 total shoulder arthroplasty, 5 reverse shoulder arthroplasty). There were 20 females and 1 male with an average age of 65.6 years (47-82) and average clinical follow-up of 4.4 years (2.0-7.4). Oncologic diagnoses included lung (4.8%) and breast (95.2%) cancer. Average radiation dose delivered was 53.3 Gy (38.5-64) in the cohort. The average time from last external beam radiation therapy to shoulder surgery was 4.3 years (0.3-18.0). One of 13 (7.7%) 90-day postoperative complications was reported in the RCR cohort: a superficial vein thrombosis. One of 8 (12.5%) 90-day complications was reported in the arthroplasty cohort: a clinically suspected but radiographically absent acromial stress fracture in a reverse shoulder arthroplasty that did not require operative intervention. Overall, there were no revisions, reoperations, or shoulder-related unplanned inpatient 90-day readmissions. Among 10 patients with prior aLND, 3 (30%) (2 RCR, 1 arthroplasty) experienced new or worsening upper extremity lymphedema within the immediate postoperative period. ConclusionA minority of patients having undergone prior radiation therapy and aLND who subsequently underwent ipsilateral shoulder surgery experienced worsening subjective upper extremity lymphedema. Although 10% of these radiation therapy patients experienced minor complications within 90 days of their shoulder surgery, none were severe enough to merit inpatient admission or revision surgery.

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