Yokouchi Hideoki, Yasumoto Taku, Murata Kohei, Tomimaru Yoshito, Ide Yoshihito, Matsunaga Hiroki, Okada Kazuyuki, Ota Hideo, Maruyama Kentaro, Kinuta Toshikatsu
Dept. of Surgery, Suita Municipal Hospital.
Gan To Kagaku Ryoho. 2008 Nov;35(12):2204-6.
Percutaneous CT fluoroscopy-guided radiofrequency ablation (RFA) was performed in 12 patients with 4 primary and 8 metastatic lung cancers as a pilot study. The main complication was a pneumothorax, which occurred in six cases and 2 of them required a chest tube drainage. Four patients died of extrapulmonary tumor progression at 3-17 months after RFA. The remaining 8 patients were alive with the disease and their median follow-up period was 12 months (range, 6-39 months). An overall survival rate was 75% at 6 months, 63% at 1 year and 43% at 2 years. A local progression occurred in 4 cases at 4-17 months after RFA and the cause of relapse was considered as insufficient ablation due to tumor localization close to the trachea, SVC or intrapulmonary vessels and bronchi. A local control rate was 92% at 6 months, 64% at 1 year and 35% at 2 years.
RFA of lung tumors is a safe and minimally invasive therapeutic intervention with a good local control for sufficiently ablated lesions. So it appears to be a favorable treatment option for high-risk patients or those with multiple lesions.