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Dr. Todd Ponsky

Pediatric Surgery · View profile →

Management of Asymptomatic Lung Lesions: Pediatric Thoracic Surgery Part...

Video Published 2019-01-11 Updated 2025-09-04

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Topic Overview

Expert panel discusses management of asymptomatic congenital lung lesions, focusing on the risk of pleuropulmonary blastoma (PPB) in cystic lesions and the debate over observation versus resection of extralobar sequestrations. Key considerations include malignancy risk (4% PPB, 1% bronchioloalveolar carcinoma), proper specimen handling during thoracoscopy, and counseling families on surveillance limitations.

Key Takeaways

  • Extralobar sequestrations without airway communication have very low infection and malignancy risk; resection of small infradiaphragmatic lesions may cause more morbidity than observation.
  • If resecting suspected CCAM thoracoscopically, place specimen in retrieval bag before extraction to prevent tumor spillage in case pathology reveals PPB.
  • Prenatal infradiaphragmatic masses (differential: adrenal hemorrhage, neuroblastoma, sequestration) can be safely observed with serial ultrasound if stable or decreasing in size per COG study data.
  • There is no reliable imaging method to distinguish CCAM from PPB preoperatively; families choosing observation must be counseled about malignancy risk and the limitations of surveillance.

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