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- SIR RFS IO Service Line Created By: Kevin Anton MD, PhD Date: 9/10/2014 76 year old female with h/o rectal cancer who underwent coloanal resection 4 yrs prior and several cycles of chemotherapy 2 81 year old male with right upper lobe lung mass Dupuy, D., et al. Semin Intervent Radiol. 2010 September; 27(3): 268–275. 3 76 year old female with severe COPD and left lower lobe lung mass Dupuy, D., et al. Chest. 2006; 129:738-745 4 Primary lung cancer Adenocarcinoma Small cell Squamous cell Large cell Lung metastasis Pneumonia Mycobacterial Fungal Rounded atelectasis Courtesy of the Journal of Respiratory Diseases 5 (Right Image): Left lower lobe spiculated mass abutting the major fissure w/ surrounding ground glass opacity… (Left Image): Enhancing rectal mass w/ fat stranding… Rectal Cancer diagnosed 4 yrs prior 6 Metastatic Rectal Cancer Rectal Cancer diagnosed 4 yrs prior 7 2.2-cm right upper lobe mass (arrow) with spiculated margins and small pleural tail 8 Adenocarcinoma 9 5-cm, spiculated mass in the left lower lobe abutting the aorta 10 Squamous Cell Carcinoma 11 PET CT – Left lower lobe lung mass 12 Post-biopsy pneumothorax CT-guided biopsy of left lower lobe lung mass Chest tube placement and lung re-expansion 13 Radiofrequency ablation Immediately post-ablation 14 Radiofrequency ablation (RFA) electrode in the mass Dupuy, D., et al. Semin Intervent Radiol. 2010 September; 27(3): 268–275. Follow up images 3 (top) and 9 months (bottom) post-ablation 15 Follow up PET 23 months post-ablation Pre-treatment PET Follow up CT images 27 months post-ablation Dupuy, D., et al. Chest. 2006; 129:738-745 16 American Cancer Society. Global Cancer Facts and Figures 2nd Edition. Atlanta: American Cancer Society; 2011. 17 American Cancer Society. Global Cancer Facts and Figures 2nd Edition. Atlanta: American Cancer Society; 2011. 18 19 Exposure to carcinogens (smoking) Genetic Susceptibility Environmental exposure to pollutants (asbestos) 20 Wong, E. Copyright © 2012-2013 McMaster Pathophysiology Review (MPR). Chronic, non-resolving coughing Persistent chest pain Shortness of breath, wheezing Hemoptysis Hoarseness Swelling of the face and neck Loss of appetite Loss of weight Fatigue © 2013 Digital News Agency. DNA is powered by The Television Consultancy Limited. Recurrent pneumonia or bronchitis 21 22 23 Characteristics Cancer Type Location PET Adenocarcinoma (40%) • Irregular, lobulated, or spiculated border Peripheral / Subpleural SUV 0.4 – 11.6 (nonBAC) Adenocarcinoma InSitu (previously bronchoalveolar) • Bubble-like areas of low attenuation within mass (pseudocavitation) Peripheral SUV 0.4 – 5.9 Squamous Cell (2530%) • • Cavitary (82%) Commonly cause bronchial obstruction (segmental or lobar lung collapse) Central (2/3) or Peripheral (1/3) SUV 1.6 – 32.6 Small Cell (10-15%) • • Locally invasive Bulky mediastinal/hilar lymphadenopathy Central (Hilar / Mediastinal) SUV 2.1 – 24.1 Carcinoid (<5%) • Central well-marginated nodule/mass with endoluminal component and post-obstructive effects Avid enhancement Central / Endobronchial Frequently false negative Large peripheral mass, solid attenuation with irregular margin Peripheral SUV 2.9 – 19.1 • Large Cell (10-15%) • Calcifications Yes (26-33%) 24 25 Stage T3: Stage T1b: • Stage T2: • Nodule in the bronchus intermedius, 4 cm from the carina (endobronchial lesion > 2 cm from the carina) • Primary mass with satellite nodules 2.9 cm RUL nodule (>2 cm but ≤ 3cm) Stage T4: • Primary RUL tumor with smaller separate nodule in the RLL 26 UyBico S. et al. Radiographics. 2010; 30: 1163-1181. Medical Management: Smoking Cessation Chemotherapy Targeted Therapies (Anti-angiogenesis agents, molecular targets, etc.) External Beam Radiation Therapy Surgical Management: 27 Deliver direct treatments to lung cancer without significant side effects or damage to nearby normal tissue. Radiofrequency Ablation Microwave Ablation Cryoablation Chemoembolization Radio Frequency Ablation Therapy in a patient with lung cancer with SOMATOM Definition AS+ (health.siemens.com). 28 Indications: Early stage non-small cell lung cancer Lung metastasis Chest wall invasion Relapse in XRT field Painful bone metastasis Patient Selection: Stage 1 disease Non-operative candidate (co-morbidities) Likely to suffer or die from disease if untreated Adapted from D. Dupuy’s Lung CA Ablation. WCIO May 2013. 29 Many patients are non-operable candidates Systemic and regional treatments are frequently inadequate, toxic, or costly Stage 1 disease less likely to have lymphatic spread Regional/systemic spread can be defined by non- invasive imaging (PET-CT) Adapted from D. Dupuy’s Lung CA Ablation. WCIO May 2013. 30 CCI = Charlson Comorbidity Index 90% 3-year survival if CCI low Survival same as no treatment if CCI high Simon et al. Eur J Radiol. 2012; 81:4167-72. Adapted from D. Dupuy’s Lung CA Ablation. WCIO May 2013. 31 Pre-procedure management/work-up Biopsy Confirm malignancy Focused history and routine physical examination Laboratory tests INR < 1.5, Platelets > 35-50k (Institution-specific) Lung function tests – FEV1 > 400 mL Imaging studies (staging, tumor location) Evaluation for lesion diameter, disease extension (lesion number and extrapulmonary lesions) and the adjacency to major vessels (>3-10 mm), heart or trachea. In cases of curative intent, lesions 3-5cm should be carefully considered due to the increased rate of recurrence. Lesions > 5cm should be excluded from treatment. However, other ablation techniques such as microwave and irreversible electroporation may overcome some of the limitations of RFA, namely for large tumors or tumors close to large vessels* Multi-disciplinary team review Evaluation for candidacy Informed Consent Indications & contraindications Risks and benefits *de Baere T. Lung Cancer Ablation: What Is the Evidence? Semin Intervent Radiol. 2013 Jun;30(2):151-156. 32 What potential complications should this patient have been consented for? Infection: Pneumonia Lung abscess Injury to adjacent structures: Pneumothorax Bronchopleural fistula Nerve injury Diaphragmatic Injury Bleeding Aseptic pleuritis Other: Tumor seeding Death S Rose, et al. J Vasc Interv Radiol 2006;17:927–951 M Kashima, et al. American Journal of Roentgenology 2011 197:4, W576-W580. 33 Post-procedure management / IO Clinic follow-up: Things to watch for Immediate/Delayed complications Length of hospitalization dependent on complications Average length of stay = 1-2 days Symptom management Pain control Imaging No standard imaging protocol for post-RFA ablation Contrast-enhanced CT, PET, and PET-CT for follow-up Monitor for local recurrence Metabolic imaging can detect early local recurrence Average follow up in IR clinic: 3-4 weeks post-procedure 34 Early Phase (Immediately to 1 wk post-RFA) Ablation zone > original tumor size Most common: Cone-shaped or rim of hyperemia (ground glass opacity) surrounding target Intralesional bubbles Intermediate Phase (>1 wk to 2 months post-RFA) Ablation zone > original tumor size, but smaller than early phase Regressing parenchymal edema, inflammation & hemorrhage Late Phase (>2 months after RFA) 3 months ablation zone size > baseline tumor 6 months ablation zone size < baseline tumor Fereidoun et al. Radiographics. 2012; 32:4, 947-969. 35 Post-ablation imaging features include CT appearance, size, enhancement, and metabolic activity on PET-CT. Initial staging PETCT Whole-body CT with CT nodule densitometry through the ablation zone PET-CT at 3 months and thereafter every 6 months alternating with CT alone. Abtin, F et al. Radiographics 2012; 32: 947-969. Abtin, F et al. Radiographics 2012; 32: 947-969. Most common post-RFA imaging findings include: Cone-shaped sectorial hyperemia (a) or rim of hyperemia characterized by ground-glass opacity, which may circumferentially or partially envelop the target lesion Intralesional bubbles (b) Abtin, F et al. Radiographics 2012; 32: 947-969. In the intermediate phase: Ablation zone will continue to be larger, compared with the original tumor, but should be smaller relative to the early phase as a result of regressing parenchymal edema, inflammation, and hemorrhage. • Initial scan – Pulmonary metastatic lesion • Immediate – Post-ablation zones • Intermediate (1 month) – Larger ablation zone than original tumor but surrounding ground-glass and hemorrhage have involuted. Abtin, F et al. Radiographics 2012; 32: 947-969. In the late phase: At 3 months, in general, the size of the ablation zone should be ≥ the baseline tumor. By 6 months, ablation zone size should be ≤ the baseline tumor. 6-months 9-months • Nodule continues to regress in size, measuring smaller than the original tumor with eventual scarring and remodeling of the lung parenchyma. There is resolution of the pleural thickening and effusion. 12-months Abtin, F et al. Radiographics 2012; 32: 947-969. • PET findings suggestive of recurrence: • • • Metastatic renal cell carcinoma • • CT (left) medial nodular edge of metastasis (arrow) too close to the bronchus and subject to heat sink effect. • 3-month surveillance PET-CT (right) shows focal area of recurrence (arrowhead). Increasing metabolic activity after 2 months Residual activity centrally or at the region of the ablated tumor Development of nodular activity at original tumor nodule Abtin, F et al. Radiographics 2012; 32: 947-969. Single center experience with 1000 RFA sessions in 420 patients M Kashima, et al. American Journal of Roentgenology 2011 197:4, W576-W580. 42 Symptoms Cough, shortness of breath, hemoptysis, weight loss Imaging Radiograph: Opacity/Mass CT: Characterization/Staging PET-CT: Staging/Nodal Involvement/Metastasis Management Medical: Chemotherapy, targeted therapies Surgical: Wedge resection, lobectomy, pneumonectomy Radiation Oncology: External beam radiation therapy IR: RFA, Microwave ablation, Cryoablation, Chemoembolization RFA in Lung Cancer Stage 1 disease Non-operable candidates 43 Caroline Simon, Damian Dupuy, et al. Pulmonary Radiofrequency Ablation: Long-term Safety and Efficacy in 153 Patients. Radiology 2007; 243:1, 268-275. Damian Dupuy, Maria Shulman. Current Status of Thermal Ablation Treatments for Lung Malignancies. Semin Intervent Radiol. 2010 September; 27(3): 268–275. Damian Dupuy, Ronald Zagoria, et al. Percutaneous Radiofrequency Ablation of Malignancies in the Lung. American Journal of Roentgenology 2000; 174:1, 57-59. Damian Dupuy, Thomas DiPetrillo, et al. Radiofrequency Ablation Followed by Conventional Radiotherapy for Medically Inoperable Stage I Non-small Cell Lung Cancer. Chest 2006; 129: 738-745. Fereidoun Abtin, Jilbert Eradat, et al. Radiofrequency Ablation of Lung Tumors: Imaging Features of the Postablation Zone. Radiographics 2012; 32:4, 947-969. Interventional Radiology Treatment for Lung Cancer. Society of Interventional Radiology. http://www.sirweb.org/patients/lung-cancer/. 2014. Irene Bargellini, Elena Bozzi, et al. Radiofrequency ablation of lung tumours. Insights Imaging 2011; 2(5): 567-576. Masataka Kashima, Koichiro Yamakado, et al. Complications After 1000 Lung Radiofrequency Ablation Sessions in 420 Patients: A Single Center’s Experiences. American Journal of Roentgenology 2011 197:4, W576-W580. Steven Rose, Patricia Thistlethwaite, et al. Lung Cancer and Radiofrequency Ablation. J Vasc Interv Radiol 2006; 17:927–951. Thierry de Baere, Geoffroy Farouli, et al. Lung Cancer Ablation: What Is the Evidence? Semin Intervent Radiol. 2013 Jun;30(2):151-156. 44 This presentation was adapted from a template created by Don J. Perry, MD 45