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Mesh
Purpose
It is recognized that
chronic inflammation can cause cancer. Even though most of the
available synthetic meshes are considered non-carcinogenic, the
inflammatory response to an infected mesh plays a constant aggression to
the skin. Chronic mesh infection is frequently the result of misuse of
mesh, and due to the challenging nature of this condition, patients
usually suffer for years until the infected mesh is removed by surgical
excision.
Methods
We report two cases of squamous-cell carcinoma (SCC) of the abdominal wall, arising in patients with long-term mesh infection.
Results
In both patients, the
degeneration of mesh infection into SCC was presumably caused by the
long-term inflammation secondary to infection. Patients presented with
advanced SCC behaving just like the Marjolin’s ulcers of burns. Radical
surgical excision was the treatment of choice. The involvement of the
bowel played an additional challenge in case 1, but it was possible to
resect the tumor and the involved bowel and reconstruct the abdominal
wall using polypropylene mesh as onlay reinforcement, in a single stage
operation. He is now under adjuvant chemotherapy. The big gap in the
midline after tumor resection in case 2 required mesh bridging to close
the defect. The poor prognosis of case 2 who died months after the
operation, and the involvement of the armpit, groin and mesenteric nodes
in case 1 shows how aggressive this disease can be.
Conclusion
Infected mesh must be
treated early, by complete excision of the mesh. Long-standing mesh
infection can degenerate into aggressive squamous-cell carcinoma of the
skin.
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