| Literature DB >> 34898999 |
Zhonglun Mai1, Bin Feng2, Qianwen He3, Qixiao Feng1.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Malignant pleural effusion (MPE) is an intractable condition. The current mainstream therapies for MPE, ie, indwelling pleural catheter and pleurodesis, have some drawbacks. In this retrospective study, we explored the efficacy and safety of medical thoracoscopic thermal ablation (argon plasma coagulation, APC) therapy for metastatic pleural tumors with MPE. PATIENTS AND METHODS: A total of 176 patients were enrolled and divided into catheter pleural drainage (CPD) group (n = 77), non-ablation group (n = 46), and thermal ablation group (n = 53). Propensity score matching (PSM) was used for between-group comparisons to minimize bias. The primary endpoints were pleural effusion objective response rate (ORR) and time to progression (TTP); secondary endpoints included overall survival (OS), chest-tube duration, and safety.Entities:
Keywords: argon plasma coagulation; malignant pleural effusion; medical thoracoscopy; metastatic pleural tumor; non-small-cell lung cancer; thermal ablation
Year: 2021 PMID: 34898999 PMCID: PMC8654692 DOI: 10.2147/IJGM.S339596
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Gen Med ISSN: 1178-7074
Figure 1Removal of adhesions resembling spider webs by different approaches. (A) APC; (B) cryoprobe; (C) biopsy forceps; (D) electrocautery.
Figure 2(A–C) Medical thoracoscopy images of a non-small cell lung cancer patient via APC treatment. (A) shows multiple masses studded in the parietal pleura before APC treatment. (B) shows an arc of ionized argon gas formed during APC treatment. (C) shows that the masses have shrank obviously after APC treatment; (D and E) CT imaging of this patient. (D1 and D2) show massive MPE in the left side before APC. The calculated volume was about 102×24.5 cm = 2450 mL. (E1 and E2) show resolution of MPE disappeared on the left side and expansion of left lung six weeks after APC.
Figure 3Study flowchart.
Baseline General Characteristics of Patients After Propensity Score Matching
| Matched Comparison (CPD vs N-A) | Matched Comparison (N-A vs T-A) | Matched Comparison (T-A vs CPD) | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CPD Group n=45 | Non-Ablation Group (N-A) n=45 | Non-ablation Group (N-A) n=43 | Thermal Ablation Group (T-A) n=43 | Thermal Ablation Group (T-A) n=51 | CPD Group n=51 | ||||
| Sex (Male/Female) | 29/16 | 28/17 | 0.827 | 25/18 | 25/18 | 1.00 | 27/24 | 30/21 | 0.550 |
| Age (years) | 58.09±9.83 | 58.62±14.42 | 0.054 | 58.84±13.14 | 58.33±9.63 | 0.052 | 58.25±9.78 | 57.73±10.42 | 0.429 |
| KPS score | 72.22±8.23 | 73.11±8.74 | 0.502 | 73.26±9.19 | 73.49±9.23 | 0.808 | 72.75±8.96 | 72.35±8.15 | 0.517 |
| Primary tumor, n(%) | – | – | 0.664 | – | – | 0.826 | – | – | 0.692 |
| SCC | 29(64.4) | 27(60.0) | – | 25(58.1) | 26(60.5) | - | 28(54.9) | 26(51.0) | – |
| ADC | 16(35.6) | 18(40.0) | – | 18(41.9) | 17(39.5) | - | 23(45.1) | 25(49.0) | – |
| Tumor stage, n(%) | – | – | 0.438 | – | – | 0.631 | – | – | 0.490 |
| IVa | 8(17.8) | 11(24.4) | – | 11(25.6) | 13(30.2) | – | 14(27.5) | 11(21.6) | – |
| IVb | 37(82.2) | 34(75.6) | – | 32(74.4) | 30(69.8) | – | 37(72.5) | 40(78.4) | – |
| Amount of MPE, n(%) | – | – | 0.649 | – | – | 0.820 | – | – | 0.097 |
| Medium | 13(28.9) | 30(66.7) | – | 14(32.6) | 15(34.9) | – | 15(29.4) | 8(15.7) | – |
| Large | 32(71.1) | 15(33.3) | – | 29(67.4) | 28(65.1) | – | 36(70.6) | 43(84.3) | – |
Abbreviations: SCC, squamous cell carcinoma; ADC, adenocarcinoma; KPS, Karnofsky performance scale.
Figure 4Kaplan–Meier curve of time to progression (A–C) and overall survival (D–F). (A and D) show CPD versus T-A treatment comparison. (B and E) show N-A versus T-A treatment comparison. (C and F) show CPD versus N-A treatment comparison.
Figure 5Comparison of objective response rate (ORR) between matched groups. (A) CPD versus thermal ablation treatment comparison. (B) Non-ablation versus ablation treatment comparison. (C) CPD versus non-ablation treatment comparison.
Figure 6Chest-tube duration of three matched pairs. (A) CPD versus thermal ablation treatment comparison. (B) Non-ablation versus ablation treatment comparison. (C) CPD versus non-ablation treatment comparison.
Complications and Vital Signs in the Matched Cohort Between the Thermal Ablation Group and the Non-Ablation Group
| Groups | Thermal Ablation (n=43) | Non-Ablation (n=43) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Complications | Chest pain, n(%) | 11(25.6) | 9(20.9) | 0.978 |
| Fever, n(%) | 3(7.0) | 2(4.7) | ||
| Intraoperative bleeding, n(%) | 4(9.3) | 3(7.0) | ||
| Vital signs | Heart rate (beats/min) | 90.9±15.8 | 88.8±12.3 | 0.489 |
| Respiratory rate (breaths/min) | 19.4±2.8 | 19.1±2.0 | 0.691 | |
| Oxygen saturation (%) | 95.7±2.4 | 96.2±2.5 | 0.321 | |
| Mean arterial pressure (mmHg) | 91.7±2.2 | 91.2±3.0 | 0.440 | |
Notes: Chest pain was defined as pain numeric rating scale(NRS) score ≥ 3; heart rate, respiratory rate and mean arterial pressure took the maximum value, oxygen saturation took the minimum value during the operation.
Comparison of Outcomes of Thermal Ablation in the Present Study with Those of Talc Pleurodesis in Previous Studies
| Studies [Ref.] | Time of Enrollment | Country/Region | Journal/Year | Cases | Methods | 1-Year Survival Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Davies et al | April 2007-February 2011 | UK | JAMA/2012 | 54 | Talc pleurodesis | 13.0% (7/54) |
| Thomas et al | July 2012-October 2014 | Australia New-Zealand Singapore | JAMA/2017 | 71 | Talc pleurodesis | 28.2% (20/71) |
| Our Study | May 2015-June 2019 | China | - | 53 | Thermal ablation | 66.0% (35/53) |
Experiences with Cytoreductive Surgery and Hyperthermic Intrathoracic Chemotherapy in the Studies Included in the Systematic Review by Migliore et al
| First Author [Ref.] | Year | Country | Patients, n | 1-Year Survival Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Monneuse | 2003 | France | 3 | 62% (13/21) |
| Shigemura | 2003 | Japan | 5 | |
| Isık | 2013 | Turkey | 11 | |
| Migliore | 2015 | Italy | 2 |
Note: Citation: European Respiratory Review 2019 28: 190018; DOI: 10.1183/16000617.0018–2019.