TY - JOUR
T1 - Cervicothoracic lipoma in a child
T2 - A case report
AU - Ozmer, Garett L.
AU - Dempsey, Jaclyn R.
AU - Shah, Nikhil R.
AU - Fortich, Susana
AU - Naik-Mathuria, Bindi
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025
PY - 2025/5
Y1 - 2025/5
N2 - Introduction: Lipomas are typically slow-growing tumors with the highest incidence in the fourth through sixth decades of life, less commonly occurring in pediatric patients, particularly extending across multiple body compartments. Excision is often reserved for cases that cause cosmetic or compressive symptoms and, due to the slow growth pattern, is less likely to be necessary in younger patients. Case presentation: A 2-year-old female with congenital albinism presented with a painless but visible 3 × 4 cm non-mobile left lateral neck mass that had been present for 2 months. MRI without contrast demonstrated a lobulated lesion in the left inferolateral supraclavicular region extending into the left thoracic inlet and thoracic apex. Due to concern for developing mass effect on carotid space structures, resection of the mass was performed. Complete excision was achieved through a single lower cervical incision, requiring dissection from the brachial plexus, carotid sheath, subclavian vessels, and extrapleural thoracic apex. Final pathology revealed an adipocytic neoplasm consistent with a lipoma with a total specimen size measuring 9 x 6.5 × 5 cm. The patient was discharged on postoperative day one and was healing well without complaint at the time of follow-up. Conclusion: Despite their benign nature, cases such as the one presented here demonstrate the capability of lipomas to adhere to and involve surrounding critical structures, particularly when located in the cervicothoracic region and occurring in younger patients. However, with careful surgical planning involving cross-sectional imaging, such lesions can successfully be completely resected through a single cervical incision without morbidity.
AB - Introduction: Lipomas are typically slow-growing tumors with the highest incidence in the fourth through sixth decades of life, less commonly occurring in pediatric patients, particularly extending across multiple body compartments. Excision is often reserved for cases that cause cosmetic or compressive symptoms and, due to the slow growth pattern, is less likely to be necessary in younger patients. Case presentation: A 2-year-old female with congenital albinism presented with a painless but visible 3 × 4 cm non-mobile left lateral neck mass that had been present for 2 months. MRI without contrast demonstrated a lobulated lesion in the left inferolateral supraclavicular region extending into the left thoracic inlet and thoracic apex. Due to concern for developing mass effect on carotid space structures, resection of the mass was performed. Complete excision was achieved through a single lower cervical incision, requiring dissection from the brachial plexus, carotid sheath, subclavian vessels, and extrapleural thoracic apex. Final pathology revealed an adipocytic neoplasm consistent with a lipoma with a total specimen size measuring 9 x 6.5 × 5 cm. The patient was discharged on postoperative day one and was healing well without complaint at the time of follow-up. Conclusion: Despite their benign nature, cases such as the one presented here demonstrate the capability of lipomas to adhere to and involve surrounding critical structures, particularly when located in the cervicothoracic region and occurring in younger patients. However, with careful surgical planning involving cross-sectional imaging, such lesions can successfully be completely resected through a single cervical incision without morbidity.
KW - Case report
KW - Cervicothoracic tumor
KW - Pediatric lipoma
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U2 - 10.1016/j.epsc.2025.102989
DO - 10.1016/j.epsc.2025.102989
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105000805508
SN - 2213-5766
VL - 116
JO - Journal of Pediatric Surgery Case Reports
JF - Journal of Pediatric Surgery Case Reports
M1 - 102989
ER -