| Literature DB >> 19829814 |
Christos Emmanouilides1, Danai Chourmouzi, Ioannis Dedes, Dimitrios Pantoleon, Polikseni Mantziari, Antonios Drevelengas.
Abstract
The case of a 64-year-old male patient who presented with a bulky osseous tumor metastasis from renal cell carcinoma is reported. The metastatic lesion extended from the acetabulum of the left iliac bone into the iliosacral joint.Treatment plan included selective arterial embolization followed by transdermal radiofrequency ablation, followed by consolidation irradiation. This sequence resulted in considerable necrosis of the bulk of the tumor and creation of a large tissue deficit, which healed over the period of several months despite anti-angiogenetic systematic treatment. The patient remains in good state of health, 20 months after the procedure. This case illustrates the usefulness of the embolization-ablation sequence in controlling large osseus metastasis.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19829814 PMCID: PMC2740168 DOI: 10.4076/1757-1626-2-6484
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cases J ISSN: 1757-1626
Figure 1.Pre-therapy CT images. (A) Axial T2-weighed image of the pelvis: shows a large lobulated mass with intermediate signal intensity. (B) Post contrast T1W Fat Sat image: shows intense enhancement of the mass.
Figure 2.(A) Anteroposterior view of aortogram demonstrates a prominent tumoral blush. The feeding arteries of the lesion originated from both 4th lumbar and left internal iliac artery (arrows). (B) Selective catheterization of lumbar artery (left) and left internal iliac artery (right). (C) Follow-up angiography after embolization shows no residual tumoral blush.
Figure 3.Unenhanced CT scans obtained during ablation show the large exophytic ileac mass (A, B). The radio frequency needle inserted into the mass under CT guidance through posterior approach.
Figure 4.Follow-up CT scan images 3 months post procedure show a large tissue deficit corresponded to ablated tissue. Note the air within cavitary lesion.
Figure 5.Post therapy MR follow up images (A, B, C) 10 months post procedure show shrinkage of the mass and the cavitation as well and hypointense area corresponded to ablated tissue.