Chemotherapy affects the development of pathological scarring after general thoracic surgery in children

Author:

Cheng Xinwei1,Huang Jiaxi2,Shan Shengzhou1,He Yining3,Zheng Hongkun1,Jin Lu4,Chen Gang2,Zhou Jia1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Shanghai Ninth People's Hospital Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine Shanghai China

2. Cardiovascular Center Children's Hospital of Fudan University Shanghai China

3. Biostatistics Office of Clinical Research Unit, Shanghai Ninth People's Hospital Shanghai JiaoTong University School of Medicine Shanghai China

4. School of Life Science and Technology ShanghaiTech University Shanghai China

Abstract

AbstractGlobally, a great number of children have been suffering from physical dysfunction and psychological stress due to uncontrollable scar growth and a lack of effective modalities. Despite chemotherapy's established role as a primary treatment for pathological scarring in adults, its efficacy in preventing or minimizing scar formation in paediatric patients remains underexplored. This retrospective cohort study aimed to refine the relevant clinical evidence and investigate the effect of chemotherapy on pathological scars in children. In this single‐centre retrospective cohort study, the data of children aged ≤18 years who underwent thoracic surgery at the Children's Hospital of Fudan University between 1 January 2018, and 31 December 2021 were assessed. The primary outcome was pathological scarring, and the secondary outcomes were subjective symptoms accompanying pathological scarring, such as pain and itching. To mitigate indication bias, analysis was performed by inverse probability weighting (IPTW) log‐binomial regression models. The cohort comprised 102 children, among whom 36 received adjuvant chemotherapy perioperatively, while 66 did not. Under the IPTW model, a statistically significant difference in pathological scarring incidence was observed between the chemotherapy and non‐chemotherapy groups (16.7% vs. 29.4%, p = 0.027). And the children received chemotherapy post‐operatively had a lower relative risk of pathological scarring, compared with those received chemotherapy both before and after surgery (19.8% vs. 28.8%). Adjuvant chemotherapy treatment after surgery may reduce the incidence of post‐operative pathological scarring in children.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Science and Technology Commission of Shanghai Municipality

Publisher

Wiley

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