| Literature DB >> 31554853 |
Stéphanie Perrodin1, Anja Lachenmayer1, Martin Maurer2, Corina Kim-Fuchs1, Daniel Candinas1, Vanessa Banz3.
Abstract
Thermal ablation has proven beneficial for hepatocellular carcinoma and possibly for colorectal liver metastases, but data is lacking for other liver metastases. Computer-assisted navigation can increase ablation efficacy and broaden its indications. We present our experience with percutaneous stereotactic image-guided microwave ablation (SMWA) for non-colorectal liver metastases (NCRLM), in form of a retrospective study including all SMWA for NCRLM from 2015 to 2017. Indication for SMWA was determined at a multidisciplinary tumorboard. End-points include recurrence, overall and liver-specific disease progression and complications. Twenty-three patients underwent 25 interventions for 40 lesions, including 17 neuroendocrine tumor, nine breast cancer, four sarcoma, two non-small cell lung cancer, three duodenal adenocarcinoma, one esophageal adenocarcinoma, one pancreatic adenocarcinoma, one ampullary carcinoma, one prostate carcinoma, and one renal cell carcinoma metastases. Median follow-up was 15 months (2-32). Incomplete ablation rate was 2.5% (1/40), local recurrence rate 10% (4/40). Three patients (12%) had minor complications. Overall disease progression was 73.9% (17/23), median disease-free survival 7 months (0-26) and overall survival 18 months (2-39). SIMWA is feasible, safe and minimally invasive for NCRLM in selected patients. While it might offer an alternative to resection or palliative strategies, the oncological benefit needs to be evaluated in a larger patient cohort.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31554853 PMCID: PMC6761186 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-50159-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Patients characteristics (n = 23).
| Variable | |
|---|---|
| Mean age, years (range) | 58.4 (7–79) |
| Male gender, n (%) | 13 (56.5) |
| ASA classification, n (%) | |
| ASA II | 6 (26.1) |
| ASA III | 16 (69.6) |
| ASA IV | 1 (4.3) |
| Identification of liver metastases, n (%) | |
| Before primary tumor | 1 (4.3) |
| At the same time | 2 (8.7) |
| After primary tumor | 20 (87) |
| Median time between initial diagnosis and metastasis, months (range) | 19 (0–312) |
| Previous treatment for liver metastases, n (%) | 5 (21.7) |
| IRE | 1 (4.3) |
| Surgical resection only | 2 (8.7) |
| Surgical resection and open MWA | 1 (4.3) |
| Laparoscopic MWA | 1 (4.3) |
| Extra-hepatic disease at time of SMWA, n (%) | 3 (13) |
| Systemic therapy at time of SMWA, n (%) | 7 (30.4) |
ASA American Society for Anesthesia, IRE irreversible electroporation, MWA Microwaveablation.
Figure 1Origin and number of treated liver metastases. NET Neuroendocrine Tumor, NSCLC Non-small cell lung cancer.
Detailed results per patient.
| Patient | Tumor entity | Treatment before SMWA | Tumorboard decision | Systemic treatment at time of SMWA | Follow-up time, | Number of sessions | Number of treated lesions | Incomplete ablation | Local recurrence | Disease progression in the liver | Disease progression elsewhere |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | NET | Resection of primary tumor, systemic Sandostatin | Ablation by adverse reaction to sandostatin treatment | none | 14 | 1 | 1 | ||||
| 2 | NET | Resection of primary tumor, systemic Sandostatin | Only two lesions, minimal progression under systemic therapy | Sandostatin | 17 | 1 | 2 | X | |||
| 3 | NET | Resection of primary tumor and Laparoscopic MWA | Single lesion on two separate occasions | none | 18 | 1 | 1 | ||||
| 4 | NET | Resection of primary tumor | Two clearly defined metastasis | none | 24 | 1 | 2 | ||||
| 5 | NET | Resection of primary tumor, systemic Sandostatin | Multiple liver metastasis, ablation of the biggest lesions (debulking) | Sandostatin | 19 | 1 | 4 | X | |||
| 6 | NET | Resection of primary tumor | Single metastasis in segment I, operative risk too high | none | 20 | 2 | 4 | X | X | ||
| 7 | NET | Metabolic therapy, resection primary tumor | Multiple liver metastasis, after systemic therapy only one remains | none | 22 | 1 | 1 | X | |||
| 8 | NET | Resection of primary tumor | To confirm diagnosis, biopsy and ablation of single lesion | none | 10 | 1 | 1 | X | X | ||
| 9 | Breast cancer, Triple-positive | Resection of primary tumor, radiotherapy, hormonal therapy | Single liver metastasis, biopsy indicated by previous rectum carcinoma, ablation in the same session | hormonal therapy | 29 | 1 | 2 | X | X | ||
| 10 | Breast cancer, ER and HER-2 positive | Resection of primary tumor, adjuvant chemotherapy, immunotherapy and radiotherapy | Two liver metastasis, good response under systemic therapy | immunotherapy | 15 | 1 | 2 | X | |||
| 11 | Breast cancer, HER-2 positive | Resection of primary tumor, adjuvant chemotherapy and immunotherapy | Two vanishing liver metastasis, biopsy and ablation indicated | adjuvant chemotherapy and immunotherapy | 14 | 1 | 1 | ||||
| 12 | Breast cancer, triple-negative | Resection of primary tumor, palliative chemotherapy | Single liver metastasis, young patient. 2nd ablation under chemotherapy, patient wishes | chemotherapy | 22 | 2 | 4 | X | X | ||
| 13 | Sarcoma | Resection of primary tumor, hemihepatectomy and MWA for two lesions in the left liver | No other metastasis, young patient, limited therapeutic options | none | 10 | 1 | 4 | X | |||
| 14 | Sarcoma | Resection of primary tumor | Ablation for single growing liver metastasis, with stable small pulmonary lesions | none | 22 | 1 | 1 | X | |||
| 15 | Sarcoma | Resection of primary tumor | Single liver lesion, biopsy indicated, concomitant ablation | none | 17 | 1 | 1 | X | X | ||
| 16 | NSCLC | Resection of primary tumor | Single liver lesion, biopsy and concomitant ablation indicated by DD HCC | none | 2 | 1 | 1 | X | |||
| 17 | NSCLC | Resection of primary tumor, adjuvant chemotherapy, Radiosurgery brain metastasis | Long oligometastatic course, systemic therapy contra-indicated, ablation for single lesion | none | 7 | 1 | 1 | X | X | ||
| 18 | Duodenum adenocarcinoma | Resection of primary tumor, adjuvant chemotherapy, palliative chemotherapy for local recurrence | Three isolated liver metastasis two years after end of chemotherapy, young patient | none | 10 | 1 | 3 | X | X | X | |
| 19 | Esophagus adenocarcinoma | Palliative chemotherapy (liver metastasis diagnosed before primary tumor) | Liver cirrhosis, liver lesion suspicious of HCC, biopsy and concomitant ablation indicated | none | 7 | 1 | 1 | X | X | X | |
| 20 | Pancreas adenocarcinoma | Palliative chemotherapy and radiotherapy | single lesion, atypical for metastasis from pancreatic adenocarcinoma, biopsy indicated, ablation at the same time | none | 7 | 1 | 1 | ||||
| 21 | Renal clear cell carcinoma | Resection of primary tumor | Single liver lesion, biopsy indicated, and concomitant ablation | none | 20 | 1 | 1 | ||||
| 22 | Prostatic carcinoma | Resection of primary tumor, antiresorbtive and antiandrogen therapy | Single metastasis, origin unclear by previous rectal carcinoma, biopsy and ablation indicated | antiresorbtive and antiandrogen therapy | 8 | 1 | 1 | X | |||
| 23 | Ampullary carcinoma | Resection of primary tumor, adjuvant chemotherapy | Single metastasis, stable months after end of chemotherapy | none | 6 | 1 | 1 | X | X |
MWA Microwave ablation, DD differential diagnosis, HCC Hepatocellular carcinoma.
Results – Intervention.
| Variable | |
|---|---|
| Number of treated lesions, n | 40 |
| SMWA sessions, n | 25 |
| Median number of session per patient, n (range) | 1 (1–2) |
| Median number of treated lesions per session, n (range) | 2 (1–4) |
| Median lesion size, mm (range) | 13.5 (6–39) |
| Median duration of ablation, minutes (range) | 4.75 (1.25–18) |
| Intraoperative biopsy, n (%) | 17 (73.9) |
| Positive biopsy | 15 (88.2) |
| Incomplete ablation, number of lesions (%) | 1 (2.5) |
| Time to diagnosis of incomplete ablation, months | 3 |
| Re-Ablation (IRE), n | 1 |
IRE irreversible electroporation.
Figure 2Distribution of treated liver lesions, per segment.
Post-interventional data.
| Variable | |
|---|---|
| Median LOS, days (range) | 2 (2–14) |
| Number of patients with complications, n (%) | 3 (12) |
| Dindo-Clavien classification | |
| Grade I | 1 |
| Grade II | 1 |
| Grad IIIa | 1 |
| Median duration of follow-up, months (range) | 15 (2–32) |
| Local recurrence at ablation site, number of lesions (%) | 4 (10) |
| Time to diagnosis, months | 3 |
| Re-Ablation, n | 0 |
| Overall disease progression, n (%) | 17 (74) |
| Intrahepatic only, n (%) | 5 (29) |
| Extrahepatic only, n (%) | 4 (24) |
| Intra- and Extrahepatic, n (%) | 8 (47) |
| Deceased during follow-up, n (%) | 7 (30) |
| Disease-free survival, median in months (range) | 7 (0–26) |
| Overall survival, median in months (range) | 18 (2–39) |
LOS Length of stay.