Pulmonary thermal ablation in patients with prior pneumonectomy Journal Article


Authors: Sofocleous, C. T.; May, B.; Petre, E. N.; Gonen, M.; Thornton, R. H.; Alago, W.; Rizk, N. P.; Dupuy, D. E.; Solomon, S. B.
Article Title: Pulmonary thermal ablation in patients with prior pneumonectomy
Abstract: OBJECTIVE. The purpose of this article is to review the safety and efficacy of thermal ablation of lung malignancies after pneumonectomy. MATERIALS AND METHODS. We reviewed patients who underwent thermal ablation for malignant lung tumors after pneumonectomy between 1999 and 2009. Patient demographics, complications, procedural success, and oncologic outcomes were recorded. Technique effectiveness was evaluated at imaging 4-6 weeks after ablation. The Kaplan-Meier method was used to evaluate overall survival. A cumulative incidence and competing risk method was used to account for progression-free tumors at the time of patient death. RESULTS. Of 619 lung ablations, 17 were performed to treat 13 tumors (nine primary and four metastatic) in 12 patients with a single lung. The median tumor size was 2 cm (range, 1.2-4 cm). Technical success was documented in all 17 cases. Technical effectiveness was documented in 10 of 12 patients. Local tumor progression occurred in five lesions within a median of 12 months (range, 10-22 months) after ablation and was treated with repeat ablation in four lesions. Complications included six (35%) of 17 pneumothoraces requiring thoracostomy. Deaths occurred within 2-12 days after three (19%) of 16 ablation sessions. The median time to primary local tumor progression was 18 months (95% CI, 12 months through not reached), and the median time to assisted (after repeat ablation) local tumor progression was 33 months (95% CI, not reached). Median overall survival was 21 months (95% CI, 18-53 months). After excluding the two early deaths complicating the initial ablation procedure, median overall survival was 37 months. CONCLUSION. Thermal ablation can offer local tumor control after pneumonectomy, despite a relatively high postprocedure clinical risk. © American Roentgen Ray Society.
Keywords: adult; controlled study; human tissue; aged; major clinical study; overall survival; review; cancer growth; treatment duration; outcome assessment; cancer incidence; progression free survival; lung non small cell cancer; lung resection; pneumonectomy; lung cancer; cancer mortality; dyspnea; postoperative complication; cause of death; pneumothorax; cancer size; surgical risk; safety; metastasis potential; thorax drainage; ablation therapy; ablation; respiratory distress; pulmonary thermal ablation
Journal Title: American Journal of Roentgenology
Volume: 196
Issue: 5
ISSN: 0361-803X
Publisher: American Roentgen Ray Society  
Date Published: 2011-05-01
Start Page: W606
End Page: W612
Language: English
DOI: 10.2214/ajr.10.5154
PUBMED: 21512052
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Export Date: 17 August 2011" - "CODEN: AJROA" - "Source: Scopus"
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MSK Authors
  1. William Alago
    25 Alago
  2. Nabil Rizk
    139 Rizk
  3. Mithat Gonen
    1029 Gonen
  4. Stephen Solomon
    422 Solomon
  5. Elena Nadia Petre
    108 Petre
  6. Benjamin J May
    1 May