| Literature DB >> 26237019 |
Bob T Li1,2, Antonia Pearson3, Nick Pavlakis4,5, David Bell6,7, Adrian Lee8,9, David Chan10,11, Michael Harden12, Manu Mathur13, David Marshman14, Peter Brady15, Stephen Clarke16,17.
Abstract
Cardiac tamponade complicating malignant pericardial effusion from non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is generally associated with extremely poor prognosis. With improved systemic chemotherapy and molecular targeted therapy for NSCLC in recent years, the prognosis of such patients and the value of invasive cardiothoracic surgery in this setting have not been adequately examined. We report outcomes from a contemporary case series of eight patients who presented with malignant cardiac tamponade due to NSCLC to an Australian academic medical institution over an 18 months period. Two cases of cardiac tamponade were de novo presentations of NSCLC and six cases were presentations following previous therapy for NSCLC. The median survival was 4.5 months with a range between 9 days to alive beyond 17 months. The two longest survivors are still receiving active therapy at 17 and 15 months after invasive surgical pericardial window respectively. One survivor had a histological subtype of large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma and the other received targeted therapy for epidermal growth factor receptor mutation. These results support the consideration of active surgical palliation to treating this oncological emergency complicating NSCLC, including the use of urgent drainage, surgical creation of pericardial window followed by appropriate systemic therapy in suitably fit patients.Entities:
Keywords: cardiac metastasis; chemotherapy; lung cancer; palliative therapy; pericardial effusion; pericardial window techniques; pericardiocentesis
Year: 2014 PMID: 26237019 PMCID: PMC4470240 DOI: 10.3390/jcm4010075
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Demographics, clinical characteristics and treatment outcomes of case series. Abbreviations: Age in years (Age); Male (M); Female (F); Eastern cooperative oncology group (ECOG); non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC).
| Case | Age | Sex | NSCLC histology | Driver mutation | Smoking history | Presentation of cardiac tamponade in relation to NSCLC diagnosis | Initial intervention | Recurrence of cardiac tamponade and subsequent intervention | Pericardial fluid cytology | Performance status after intervention | Cancer therapy prior | Cancer therapy after | Survival after cardiac tamponade |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 55 | M | Adenocarcinoma | Wild type for | Smoker 25 pack years | Presentation at diagnosis | Surgical subxiphoid pericardia-peritoneal window | No | Adenocarcinoma | ECOG 1 | None | Carboplatin and gemcitabine 4 cycles | 6 months |
| 2 | 65 | F | Adenocarcinoma | Never | 2 years after stage IIA NSCLC | Surgical subxiphoid pericardia-peritoneal window | No | Adenocarcinoma | ECOG 2 | Left upper lobectomy | Erlotinib | Alive at 15 months | |
| 3 | 49 | M | Large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma | Unknown | Smoker 20 pack years | Presentation at diagnosis | Surgical subxiphoid pericardial-peritoneal window | No | No malignant cells | ECOG 1 | None | Concurrent chemoradiation to mediastinum, carboplatin and etoposide 6 cycles, prophylactic cranial irradiation | Alive at 17 months |
| 4 | 49 | F | Adenocarcinoma | Wild type for | Never | 4 months after stage IV NSCLC | Surgical subxiphoid pericardial-peritoneal window | Yes, 2 months after, thoracoscopic pericardial-pleural window | Adenocarcinoma | ECOG 1 | Carboplatin and gemcitabine 4 cycles | Nanoparticle albumin bound paclitaxel 2 cycles | 3 months |
| 5 | 48 | M | Adenocarcinoma | Wild type for | Never | 10 months after stage IV NSCLC | Surgical subxiphoid pericardial-peritoneal window | Yes, 3 weeks after, thoracotomy pericardial-pleural window | Adenocarcinoma | ECOG 1 | Carboplatin and pemetrexed 5 cycles | Erlotinib | 3 months |
| 6 | 70 | F | Adenocarcinoma | Wild type for | Never | 2 months after stage IV NSCLC | Pericardiocentesis and percutaneous drain | Yes, 1 month after, repeat pericardiocentesis and percutaneous drain, surgical subxiphoid pericardial-peritoneal window | Adenocarcinoma | ECOG 4 | Carboplatin and gemcitabine 1 cycle | None | 2 months |
| 7 | 62 | M | Large cell carcinoma | Unknown | Ex-smoker, 40 pack years | 4 months after stage IIIB NSCLC | Pericardiocentesis and percutaneous drain | No | Atypical cells | ECOG 4 | Cisplatin and etoposide 1 cycle | None | 9 days |
| 8 | 55 | F | Adenocarcinoma | Wild type for | Ex-smoker, 30 pack years | 2 years after stage IV NSCLC | Surgical subxiphoid pericardial window | No | Adenocarcinoma | ECOG 3 | Carboplatin and gemcitabine 6 cycles, pemetrexed 3 cycles, radiotherapy to axillary lymph nodes, erlotinib 3 months, paclitaxel 5 months | None | 7 months |
Figure 1Computed tomography (CT) chest axial view. Large pericardial effusion and moderate bilateral pleural effusions.
Figure 2Transthoracic echocardiogram. Large pericardial effusion, right atrial and ventricular diastolic collapse consistent with cardiac tamponade.
Figure 3Chest X-ray. Enlargement of pericardial sillouette.