| Literature DB >> 33330028 |
Vincenza Granata1, Roberta Grassi2, Roberta Fusco1, Sergio Venanzio Setola1, Raffaele Palaia3, Andrea Belli3, Vittorio Miele4, Luca Brunese5, Roberto Grassi2, Antonella Petrillo1, Francesco Izzo3.
Abstract
This article provides an overview of imaging assessment of ablated pancreatic cancer. Only studies reporting radiological assessment on pancreatic ablated cancer were retained. We found 16 clinical studies that satisfied the inclusion criteria. Radiofrequency ablation and irreversible electroporation have become established treatment modalities because of their efficacy, low complication rates, and availability. Microwave Ablation (MWA) has several advantages over radiofrequency ablation (RFA), which may make it more attractive to treat pancreatic cancer. Electrochemotherapy (ECT) is a very interesting emerging technique, characterized by low complication rate and safety profile. According to the literature, the assessment of the effectiveness of ablative therapies is difficult by means of the Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors (RECIST) criteria that are not suitable to evaluate the treatment response considering that are related to technique used, the timing of reassessment, and the imaging procedure being used to evaluate the efficacy. RFA causes various appearances on imaging in the ablated zone, correlating to the different effects, such as interstitial edema, hemorrhage, carbonization, necrosis, and fibrosis. Irreversible electroporation (IRE) causes the creation of pores within the cell membrane causing cell death. Experimental studies showed that Diffusion Weigthed Imaging (DWI) extracted parameters could be used to detect therapy effects. No data about functional assessment post MWA is available in literature. Morphologic data extracted by Computed Tomography (CT) or Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) do not allow to differentiate partial, complete, or incomplete response after ECT conversely to functional parameters, obtained with Position Emission Tomography (PET), MRI, and CT.Entities:
Keywords: ablation treatment; computed tomography; functional imaging; magnetic resonance imaging; pancreatic cancer
Year: 2020 PMID: 33330028 PMCID: PMC7731725 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2020.560952
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Included and excluded studies in systematic review.
Mean value and the range of overall survival and the mean value of major complication rates, minor complication rates, mortality rate, and imaging analysis in pancreatic cancer treated with ablation therapies.
| Technique | Authors | Overall Survival (OS) | Major Complication Rates | MinorComplicationRates | MortalityRates | Imaging modality used and radiological response criteria used |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Paiella et al. ( | 23 months (mean value) | 1.9% | 20.2% | 0.7% | CT |
|
| Carrafiello et al. ( | – | 8.5% | 8.6% | No data reported | CT |
|
| Martin et al. ( | 24.9 months (mean value) | 1.5% | 15% (open approach) | 2% | CT- MRI |
|
| Granata et al. ( | 11.5 months | 0% | 23.1% | 4.2% | CT-MRI |
Figure 2Patient 1 with Body-Tail Pancreatic Cancer. Morphological MRI assessment post-RFA treatment. In (A) (VIBE T1-W post-contrast sequence during portal phase in axial plane) pre-treatment evaluation of lesion (arrow). In (B) (VIBE T1-W post-contrast sequence during portal phase in axial plane) arrow shows ablated area. Qualitative assessment shows significant differences in SI in pre- and post-treatment sequences.
Figure 3Patient 2 with Body-Tail Pancreatic Cancer. Morphological MRI assessment post-ECT treatment. In (A) (VIBE T1-W post-contrast sequence during portal phase in axial plane) pre-treatment evaluation of lesion (arrow). In (B) (VIBE T1-W post-contrast sequence during portal phase in axial plane) arrow shows ablated area. Qualitative assessment shows significant differences in SI in pre- and post-treatment sequences.
Figure 4Patient 3 with head pancreatic cancer. Morphological MRI and CT assessment post-ECT treatment. In (A) (VIBE T1-W post-contrast sequence during portal phase in axial plane) and (C) (CT scan during pancreatic phase of contrast study) the arrow shows lesion. In (B) (VIBE T1-W post-contrast sequence during portal phase in axial plane) and (D) (CT scan during pancreatic phase of contrast study) the arrow shows ablated area. Qualitative assessment shows no significant differences in SI in pre- and post-treatment sequences and no significant differences in density in pre- and post-CT images.
Figure 5Patient 3 with head pancreatic cancer (the same of ). Functional (DW-MRI and PET) assessment post-ECT treatment. In (A) (pre treatment) and (D) (post treatment) (b 800 s/mm2) the lesion (arrow) shows restricted signal so as in ADC map (B: pre treatment; and E: post treatment) the lesion shows hypointense signal (arrow). This qualitative analysis is indicative of non-responder lesion. The PET (C: pre treatment; and F: post treatment) assessment shows (arrow) a responder lesion.