| Literature DB >> 30440161 |
Giovanni Mauri1, Luca Nicosia2, Paolo Della Vigna1, Gianluca Maria Varano1, Daniele Maiettini1, Guido Bonomo1, Gioacchino Giuliano3, Franco Orsi1, Luigi Solbiati4, Elvio De Fiori5, Enrico Papini6, Claudio Maurizio Pacella7, Luca Maria Sconfienza8,9.
Abstract
Minimally invasive image-guided thermal ablation is becoming increasingly common as an alternative to surgery for the treatment of benign thyroid nodules. Among the various techniques for thermal ablation, laser ablation (LA) is the least invasive, using the smallest applicators available on the market and enabling extremely precise energy deposition. However, in some cases, multiple laser fibers must be used simultaneously for the treatment of large nodules. In this review, the LA technique is described, and its main clinical applications and results are discussed and illustrated.Entities:
Keywords: Laser therapy; Thyroid gland; Thyroid nodule; Ultrasonography
Year: 2018 PMID: 30440161 PMCID: PMC6323312 DOI: 10.14366/usg.18034
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ultrasonography ISSN: 2288-5919
Fig. 1.Ultrasonography showing laser treatment of a 62-year-old patient with a benign thyroid nodule.
A. Ultrasonography scan before treatment demonstrates a large, isoechoic, non-homogeneous thyroid nodule. B. Contrast-enhanced ultrasonography of the same nodule before treatment shows intense enhancement of the nodule. C. Ultrasonography during treatment shows the insertion of two laser fibers with the use of dedicated planning software. Hyperechoic areas due to gas formation are seen around the needle tips (green and yellow lines, yellow markers, and blue circle line indicate expected fiber path, expected position of needle tip, and expected area of ablation with 1 pull-back, respectively). D. Contrast-enhanced ultrasonography performed after treatment demonstrates lack of enhancement in the treated area (markers).
Fig. 2.Ultrasonography of a 62-year-old patient with a benign thyroid nodule treated with laser ablation.
A. Ultrasonography shows a large, isoechoic, non-homogeneous, predominantly solid thyroid nodule (arrowheads). B. Ultrasonography during treatment shows two parallel laser fibers that are clearly visible as hyperechoic lines (arrows), and hyperechoic areas due to gas formation during ablation around the tip of the laser fibers. C. Ultrasonography after one pull-back of the two laser (arrows) fibers shows the two laser fibers visible as hyperechoic lines, while an area of non-homogeneous hyperechogenicity is seen in the previously ablated area, corresponding to residual gas after treatment. D. Ultrasonography taken 2 months after treatment demonstrates a 58% volumetric reduction of the treated nodules, which appear as isoechoic and non-homogeneous (arrowheads).
Fig. 3.18-Fludeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (18FDG-PET) and ultrasonography in a 73-year-old patient with previous papillary thyroid carcinoma and a cytologically proven metastatic lymph node treated with laser ablation.
A. 18FDG-PET scan shows a left cervical area of focal intense uptake (arrows) representing a metastatic lymph node. B. Ultrasonography performed at the same level shows a hypoechoic oval-shaped lymph node, with loss of normal nodal appearance (arrow; c, carotid artery). C. Contrast-enhanced ultrasonography demonstrates intense enhancement of the lymph node (asterisk). D. Ultrasonography during the treatment shows two laser fibers, visible as hyperechoic lines (arrows), extending into the lymph node. E. Ultrasonography during ablation shows two hyperechoic areas around the tip of the two laser fibers (arrows), reflecting gas formation during ablation. F. Post-treatment contrast-enhanced ultrasonography demonstrates the lack of enhancement in the treated lymph node (asterisk). G. 18FDG-PET after treatment shows no uptake at the level of the previously treated lymph node (arrows).
Characteristics and results of studies on laser ablation of recurrent thyroid cancers
| Study | Year | No. of patients | No. of treated tumours | Tumour dimensions | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Papini et al. [ | 2013 | 5 | 8 | Mean: 0.64±0.58 mL | Technical success: 100%; no major complications |
| 12-Month follow-up | |||||
| Mean volume reduction 87.72%±0.11% | |||||
| Mean serum Tg on LT4 decreased from 8.0±3.2 to 2.0±2.5 ng/mL | |||||
| Undetectable serum levels of Tg: 3/5 patients (60%) | |||||
| Mauri et al. [ | 2013 | 15 | 24 | Mean: 1.1±0.4 cm (range, 0.6-1.6 cm) | Technical success: 100%; no major complications |
| 6-Month follow-up | |||||
| Local control: 11/15 patients (73%) | |||||
| Negative on 18FDG-PET/CT and CEUS: 20/24 nodes (83%) | |||||
| Normalized serum Tg/TgAb: 6/15 patients (40%) | |||||
| 12-Month follow-up | |||||
| Local control: 10/14 patients (71.4%) | |||||
| Negative on 18FDG-PET/CT and CEUS: 16/20 nodes (80%) | |||||
| Normalized serum Tg/TgAb: 4/10 patients (40%) | |||||
| Mauri et al. [ | 2016 | 24 | 46 | Mean: 1.0±0.5 cm (range, 0.6-1.6 cm) | Technical success: 100%; no major complications |
| Mean follow-up of 30±11 months | |||||
| Tg decreased from 8.40±9.25 to 2.73±4.00 ng/mL | |||||
| Tg/TgAb normalized: 11/24 patients (45.8%) | |||||
| Local control: 40/46 lymph nodes (86.9%), no residual disease at imaging: 19/24 patients (79.1%) | |||||
| Estimated mean time to progression: 38.6±2.7 months | |||||
| Zhou et al. [ | 2016 | 21 | 27 | Mean volume: 105.42±114 mm3 | Technical success: 100%; no major complications |
| Completely treated with 1 ablation: 24/27 lymph nodes (88.8%), | |||||
| completely treated with 2 ablations: 3/27 (12.2%) | |||||
| Significant volumetric reduction to 0.8-2.4 mm3 at the final follow-up | |||||
| No regrowth or new lesions at US during follow-up | |||||
| Zhang et al. [ | 2018 | 17 | 21 | Mean volume: 0.110±0.125 mL (interquartile range, 0.01-0.536 mL) | Technical success: 100%; no major complications |
| Completely ablated in 1 ablation: 18/21 cases (85.7%), completely ablated with 2 ablations: 3/21 (14.3%) | |||||
| Mean follow-up of 17.86±4.704 months (interquartile range, 12-27 months): no evident recurrence on US |
Tg, thyroglobulin; LT4, levothyroxine; 18FDG-PET/CT, 18-Fludeoxyglucose positron emission tomography computed tomography; CEUS, contrast-enhanced ultrasonography; TgAb, anti-thryoglobulin antibody; US, ultrasonography.
Preliminary results.