| Literature DB >> 26880683 |
Alireza Fotouhi Ghiam1,2, Laura A Dawson1,2, Wael Abuzeid3, Sarah Rauth1,4, Raymond W Jang5, Eric Horlick3, Andrea Bezjak1,2.
Abstract
Cardiac metastases (CM), although a rare manifestation of metastatic cancer, are increasing in incidence with the improved prognosis and increased longevity of many patients with cancer. This condition may be life-threatening, especially for bulky rapidly growing tumors. Such cancer presentations may be amenable to palliative radiotherapy to improve symptoms and to prevent further cardiac function decline. Here, we report on our experience with 10 patients with mural CM who received radiotherapy (RT) to the heart with palliative intent. The radiation treatment was given in different clinical situations using different dose and fractionation, and with a variety of outcomes. Palliative RT was a reasonably effective treatment, leading to good radiographic response in five patients who were evaluable for radiologic response. The mean duration of response in responding patients was 6.3 months (range: 3-11 months). This report describing clinical dilemmas around CM radiation therapy summarizes the previous experiences with radiation in treatment of CM and may assist in the considerations of palliative treatment for these patients.Entities:
Keywords: Heart; heart neoplasms; neoplasm metastasis; palliative medicine; radiotherapy
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26880683 PMCID: PMC4924355 DOI: 10.1002/cam4.619
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Med ISSN: 2045-7634 Impact factor: 4.452
Summary of literature reporting patients with cardiac metastases treated with palliative RT where the details of radiation treatment are reported
| Author | Number of cases | Primary | Location | Prior thoracic RT | Prior surgery | Dose (Gy)/fractionation | Response to RT | Duration of response | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Al‐Mamgani et al. | 1 | Esophageal carcinoma | RV | Yes | No biopsy or surgery | 20/5 | Symptom improvement | 2.5 months | Total RT dose of 45 Gy in 25 fractions; and an additional dose of 10–15 Gy through small portals |
| Orcurto et al. | 1 | Small‐cell lung cancer | RV | No | Biopsy | 60 Gy | Asymptomatic patient | Not reported | |
| Chen et al. | 1 | Thyroid squamous cell carcinoma | RV | No | Biopsy | 35/10 | Decreased tumor size. Improved RVOT obstruction. | 3 months | |
| Takenaka et al. | 7 | Soft‐tissue sarcoma | All heart chambers and pericardium | No | No biopsy or surgery | 25/5, 45/15, 50/25, 60/30, 40/20, 32/16 | MS of patients who received RT = 10.5 months (3.5 months: those who did not) | 20 months (reported in only one case) | RT dose should be >45 Gy (immediately and prior to chemotherapy): RT ceased the need for continuous drainage of cardiac effusion |
| Cham et al. | 38 | Different histologies | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported | 25–35 Gy in 3–4 weeks | Overall response rate: 61% | Breast cancer patients: 6 months (2–36 months)Other cancers: 1–4 months | RT was given with 250 kVp equipment using old techniques (clinical set‐up and portal films) |
| Dasgupta et al. | 1 | Anaplastic thyroid carcinoma | RARV | Yes | Biopsy | 37.5/15 | No change in size during RT; Decreased FDG uptake in post‐RT PET‐CT | 2 months | Cardiac metastasis involved the pacemaker leads within the RA and RV. RT was given concurrently with Paclitaxel on days 1 and 8 of RT. No significant acute toxicity |
| Lemus et al. | 2 | Squamous cell cervical carcinoma | RV, Interventricular septum and RARV and interventricular septum | No | No biopsy or surgery | Case 1: 28.8/16Case 2: 60/30 | Case 1: No responseCase 2: Not reported | Case 1: Patient died on treatmentCase2: Not reported (patient died 5 months after completion of RT) | Case 1: RT was delivered to the whole heart with Cisplatin given on the first day of RTCase 2: RT was given concurrently with infusional 5‐FU and Cisplatin |
| Magnuson et al. | 1 | Melanoma | LA and PV | No | No biopsy or surgery | 45/25 | Significant radiologic response | 4 months |
MS, median survival; RV, right ventricle; RA, right atrium; LV, left ventricle; LA, left atrium; PV, pulmonary vein; RVOT, right ventricle outflow tract; RT, radiotherapy.
The clinical features and treatment details of our 10 cases with mural cardiac metastases from different histologies who were treated with palliative RT
| Patient | Age | Sex | Primary tumor | Tumor location | Prior surgery | Prior thoracic RT | Technique | Dose (Gy) | Fractions | Response | Duration of response (months) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 51 | Female | Myxoid liposarcoma | RV, LV | Yes | No | IMRT | 45 | 25 | Complete resolution of symptoms; Complete radiologic response | 11 months |
| 2 | 68 | Male | Sarcoma | RA | Yes | Yes | IMRT | 50 | 25 | Complete resolution of symptoms | 7 months |
| 3 | 53 | Female | Diffuse large B‐cell lymphoma | LV | No | No | POP AP/PA | 25 | 10 | Complete resolution of symptoms; partial radiologic response | 3 months |
| 4 | 74 | Male | Adenocarcinoma of rectum | RV and Tricuspid valve | No | No | POP AP/PA | 20 | 5 | Partial resolution of symptoms | 3 months |
| 5 | 54 | Male | Thymic carcinoma | RV | No | Yes | POP AP/PA | 36 | 18 | Partial resolution of symptoms; partial radiologic response | 11 months |
| 6 | 71 | Male | Hepatocellular carcinoma | RV | No | No | VMAT | 54 | 27 | Stable symptoms; partial radiologic response | 6 months |
| 7 | 53 | Female | Adenocarcinoma of lung | LA | No | No | POP AP/PA | 20 | 5 | Stable clinical symptom | 3.5 months |
| 8 | 67 | Female | Thymoma | RA and SVC | No | Yes | 3DCRT | 30 | 20 | Partial resolution of symptoms; partial radiologic response | 6 months |
| 9 | 29 | Male | Adenocarcinoma of lung | LV | No | Yes | POP AP/PA | 6 | 1 | Patient died on treatment | |
| 10 | 66 | Male | Adenocarcinoma of rectum | RA | No | No | POP AP/PA | 16 | 4 | Patient died on treatment | |
RT, radiation treatment; PORT, postoperative radiation treatment; LV, left ventricle, RV, right ventricle, LA, left atrium, RA, right atrium, SVC, superior vena cava; NA, not applicable; IMRT, intensity‐modulated radiation therapy; VMAT, volumetric modulated arc therapy; PCU, palliative care unit.
Figure 1Transthoracic echo of patient 11. (A) Parasternal long‐axis view showing a small LV with normal function and a large 7.7 × 5.7 × 3.5 cm mass (arrow) causing an almost complete obstruction of RVOT, narrow pulse pressure, and low cardiac output; (B) apical 4 chamber view showing an obstructive RV mass (arrow) involving both septal and lateral walls of the LV and extending from base to apex; (C) short‐axis view at the level of AV showing RVOT mass (arrow) extending from the level of TV toward the pulmonic valve (RVOT, right ventricular outflow tract; AO, aorta; LV, left ventricle; LA, left atrium; RV, right ventricle; RA, right atrium; AV, aortic valve; TV, tricuspid valve).