Staging Laparotomy in Hodgkinʼs Disease

Abstract
Staging laparotomy (multiple liver and lymph node biopsies and splenectomy) was performed at the North Carolina Baptist Hospital in 123 patients with Hodgkin's disease. There were no deaths. Wound, pulmonary, intra-abdominal or urinary tract complications developed in 17 patients. Of those complications, one case each of pelvic abscess, subphrenic abscess, small bowel obstruction, staphylococcal peritonitis and subphrenic hematoma required a major intra-abdominal operation. The patients were classified on the basis of histopathology: nodular sclerosis—40, mixed cellularity—44, lymphocyte predominant —24, lymphocyte depleted—13, and undetermined—2. The pathological stage following laparotomy was unchanged from the clinical stage in 62%, reduced in 15%, and advanced in 23%. Subsequent therapy, therefore, was altered in 38% of the patients. Lymphangiography, done in 108 patients, showed lymph node involvement in 46 patients and no involvement in 62 patients. Of those lymphangiographic findings, 79% were confirmed histopathologically, 19% were falsely positive, and 1.8% were falsely negative. There were positive findings of Hodgkin's disease in the spleen in 42% of patients. The staging laparotomy continues to be a valuable tool in the staging and treatment of Hodgkin's disease.