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Percutaneous microwave ablation of a lung tumor abutting the heart George A. Carberry, MD Meghan G. Lubner, MD Fred T. Lee Jr., MD University of Wisconsin Hospital and Clinics Madison, WI Clinical history: 82 year-old woman Past Present • 2003: Follicular thyroid carcinoma • Rising serum thyroglobulin with enlarging RML pulmonary nodule, a presumed metastasis • Meds: bisoprololhydrochlorothiazide 5-6.25 mg bid, levothyroxine 125 mcg qd • Allergies: ASA, codeine, quinine • CBC and coags: WNL – total thyroidectomy – radioactive iodine ablation • 2013: Left upper lobe pulmonary metastasis s/p VATS resection • PMH: HTN, paroxysmal SVT, anti-RhE antibodies with history of bleeding following surgical procedures CT findings A B Unenhanced axial (A) and coronal reconstructed (B) images from chest CT demonstrate a lobular nodule abutting the right atrium (arrows), increased in size from a chest CT performed 3 months prior. How would you approach this nodule for percutaneous ablation? A B Unenhanced axial (A) and coronal reconstructed (B) images from chest CT demonstrate a lobular nodule measuring 1.1 x 1.2 cm abutting the right atrium (arrows), increased in size from a chest CT performed 3 months prior. How would you approach this nodule for percutaneous ablation? • • • • A. Anterior B. Lateral C. Posterior D. Would not attempt given nodule location and patient’s history of arrhythmia How would you approach this nodule for percutaneous ablation? • A. Anterior • Would center emission point of antenna within nodule • Would expose greatest volume of tumor to microwave field (ellipsis) • Would minimize normal lung traversed How would you approach this nodule for percutaneous ablation? • B. Lateral • Would avoid crossing fissure • Would have difficulty including cardiac margin of the tumor in the microwave field • Would not center emission point in tumor How would you approach this nodule for percutaneous ablation? • C. Posterior • Would traverse greatest amount of normal lung tissue • Would traverse hilum • Would cross fissure How would you approach this nodule for percutaneous ablation? • D. Would not attempt • Oligometastatic disease in setting of long disease free interval associated with improved outcomes following local therapy1,2 • Limited treatment options for this patient: • Higher risk for surgery given comorbidities • SBRT of central lung tumors associated with complications from collateral tissue injury3,4 • While patient’s pre-existing arrhythmia important to consider, thermoprotection from cardiac heat sink and current use of thorascopic MW antennas to safely treat cardiac arrhythmias reassuring5 Planned approach • Anterior intercostal approach • Based on nodule size, use of a single probe (PR probe, NeuWave Inc., WI) would cover tumor and a 5 mm margin of lung tissue Patient preparation A B Cardiac monitor leads for continuous cardiac monitoring (A) and a defibrillator pad (B) were applied to the patient’s chest. The patient was at a theoretical higher risk for ablation-induced arrhythmia given her history of underlying paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia. Probe placement B A C Axial (A), coronal (B) and sagittal (C) reconstructions following antenna placement into the nodule confirm positioning of the antenna’s emission point in the center of the tumor. Antenna placement was performed with CT fluoroscopy (2.5 mm collimation; 0.5 s rotation time; 60 mA) Probe placement • Systole A • Diastole B A short run of continuous CT fluoroscopy was acquired to measure the distance from outer right atrium to inner contour of antenna during diastole (when heart closest to probe). Note the slightly closer distance between heart and antenna at diastole. Probe placement • Systole Goal distance was >5 mm based on estimated probe-specific ablation zone geometry and the • Diastole assumption that cardiac heat sink and motion would protect the adjacent heart tissue 6 mm A B A short run of continuous CT fluoroscopy was acquired to measure the distance from outer right atrium to inner contour of antenna during diastole (when heart closest to probe). Note the slightly closer distance between heart and antenna at diastole. Ablation protocol • MW power was slowly increased: Start: End: 45 W x 30 sec 50 W x 30 sec 55 W x 3 min 60 W x 30 sec 65 W x 1 min 30 sec 6 minutes of ablation time Intraprocedural monitoring • Attention to the cardiac monitor by the anesthesia team and interventionalists – Development of premature beats (PVC or PACs) would have prompted a decrease in power or pulsing of power (e.g. 30 sec on and 30 sec off) to limit growth of MW field – Development of a ventricular arrhythmia (VT or VF) or supraventricular arrhythmia would require stopping the ablation with repositioning of the probe ECG monitoring No change from patient’s baseline cardiac rhythm during the ablation Ablation Confirmation A commercial software program integrated into the NeuWave Intelligent Ablation System (Ablation Confirmation™) provided multiplanar color overlays (Figure) that demonstrate complete coverage of the tumor (red overlay) by the ablation zone (green overlay) Post procedure • Tiny asymptomatic pneumothorax – Stable over several CXRs • • • • No intra-parenchymal hemorrhage No pericardial effusion No postprocedure pain Patient discharged following day Follow-up • Post-ablation chest CT and repeat serum thyroglobulin to be performed in 1 month • Patient continues to have no signs or symptoms referable to the lung ablation Discussion • Little data exist on safety of percutaneous thermal ablation near the heart • Heart represents a large heat sink, both protecting it from thermal injury but also making it difficult to maintain lethal temperatures in the tumor6,7 • MW able to achieve higher temperatures than RF and unaffected by high electrical resistance in aerated lung, potentially making it a useful modality for these cases8,9 • Irreversible electroporation not limited by heat sink but requires multiple applicators, general anesthesia and cardiac synchronization10 • More data is needed to determine a safe distance, power level and duration at which a lung ablation can routinely be performed near the heart. References 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Lo, Simon S., et al. "The role of local therapy in the management of lung and liver oligometastases." Nature Reviews Clinical Oncology 8.7 (2011): 405-416. Rowe, Steven P., et al. "Advances in the Treatment of Oligometastatic Disease:: What the Radiologist Needs to Know to Guide Patient Management." Academic radiology (2016). Corradetti MN, Haas AR, Rengan R. Central-airway necrosis after stereotactic body-radiation therapy. N Engl J Med 2012; 366: 2327-2329 Timmerman R., et al. Excessive toxicity when treating central tumors in a phase II study of stereotactic body radiation therapy for medially inoperable early-stage lung cancer. J Clin Oncol 2006; 24:4833-4839 Lee, Sang Kwon, et al. "Epicardial microwave application in chronic atrial fibrillation surgery." Journal of Korean medical science 20.5 (2005): 727-731. Iguchi T, Hiraki T, Gobara H, Mimura H, Fujiwara H, Tajiri N, et al. Percutaneous radiofrequency ablation of lung tumors close to the heart or aorta: evaluation of safety and effectiveness. JVIR. 2007;18(6):733-40. Steinke, Karin, et al. "Safety of radiofrequency ablation of myocardium and lung adjacent to the heart: an animal study." Journal of Surgical Research 114.2 (2003):140-145. Brace CL, Hinshaw JL, Laeseke PF, et al. Pulmonary thermal ablation: comparison of radiofrequency and microwave devices by using gross pathologic and CT findings in a swine model. Radiology 2009; 251(3):705-711. Wolf FJ, Grand DJ, Machan JT, et al. Microwave ablation of lung malignancies: effectiveness, CT findings and safety in 50 patients. Radiology 2008; 247(3):871-879. Deodhar, Ajita, et al. "Irreversible electroporation near the heart: ventricular arrhythmias can be prevented with ECG synchronization." AJR. 196.3 (2011): W330. Discussion questions • What other concerns might you have with an ablation near the heart and mediastinum? • Has anyone treated a lung tumor near the heart? Positive of negative outcome? • Would anyone consider some form of tissue displacement method for these tumors? E.g. Iatrogenic pneumothorax, pleural effusion, etc.