# Right upper lobectomy for lung cancer associated with a displaced anomalous bronchus: two case reports

**Authors:** Yoshihito Iijima, Takaki Mizoguchi, Masahito Ishikawa, Shun Iwai, Nozomu Motono, Hidetaka Uramoto

PMC · DOI: 10.1186/s40792-024-01986-8 · Surgical Case Reports · 2024-08-15

## TL;DR

This paper presents two case reports on lung cancer surgeries involving displaced bronchi, highlighting the importance of preoperative planning and surgical techniques.

## Contribution

The paper contributes detailed surgical insights and techniques for managing lung cancer with displaced anomalous bronchi.

## Key findings

- Displaced bronchi are often accompanied by vascular and fissure abnormalities, requiring careful preoperative evaluation.
- A 'hilum first, fissure last' surgical approach proved effective in both cases.
- Robotic and video-assisted techniques were adapted based on anatomical findings during surgery.

## Abstract

Bronchial bifurcation abnormalities are often discovered incidentally on chest computed tomography or bronchoscopy. As this condition is asymptomatic, it has little effect on the disease course of patients with lung cancer. However, this abnormality must be considered when performing lung resection.

Patient 1 was a 73-year-old man with suspected simultaneous triple lung cancers [cT1c (3) N0M0, Stage IA3] in the right and left upper lobes. He was initially scheduled to undergo right upper lobectomy and systematic nodal dissection. Chest computed tomography revealed a displaced B3 that arose from the right middle lobe bronchus. V1+2 was transected first, followed by the superior truncus of the pulmonary artery, and B1+2, respectively. After the branches of V3 were ligated, B3 was identified smoothly. Finally, the incomplete interlobar fissure between the upper and middle lobes was separated using an auto-stapler. No vascular abnormalities were observed. Patient 2 was a 62-year-old woman with suspected lung cancer (cT1cN0M0, Stage IA3) in the right upper lobe, and was scheduled to undergo right upper lobectomy and lobe-specific nodal dissection. Chest computed tomography revealed a right top pulmonary vein and a displaced B1 that arose from the right main bronchus independently. Because V1+3 was resected simultaneously during upper and middle lobe resection during robot-assisted thoracic surgery, the procedure was cool-converted to video-assisted thoracic surgery. An independently A1 was observed, followed by A2b and A3, which branched off as a common stem. A right top pulmonary vein was smoothly detected. Each blood vessel was transected using an auto-stapler. B2+3 was transected first using an auto-stapler, followed by B1.

The displaced anomalous bronchus is often accompanied by pulmonary arterial or venous abnormalities and an incomplete interlobar fissure. A “hilum first, fissure last” technique is often useful. Preoperative evaluation and surgical planning are important.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** lung cancer (MONDO:0005138)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** lung cancer (MESH:D008175), vascular abnormalities (MESH:D014652), pulmonary arterial or venous abnormalities (MESH:D000071079), Bronchial bifurcation abnormalities (MESH:D001982), displaced anomalous bronchus (MESH:D006617), cT1c (3) N0M0 (MESH:C537153)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11324617