Robinson D S, Parel J M, Denham D B, González-Cirre X, Manns F, Milne P J, Schachner R D, Herron A J, Comander J, Hauptmann G
Department of Surgery, University of Miami School of Medicine, FL, USA.
J Am Coll Surg. 1998 Mar;186(3):284-92. doi: 10.1016/s1072-7515(97)00152-x.
This investigation describes the preclinical development of a laser fiberoptic interstitial delivery system for the thermal destruction of small breast cancers. We propose adaptation of this technology to stereotactic mammographic instrumentation currently employed for diagnostic core biopsy to thermally ablate a site of disease with maximal treatment efficacy, minimal observable superficial change, reduced patient trauma, and lowered overall treatment costs.
Laser hyperthermia is a clinical modality that seeks to achieve tumor destruction through controlled tissue heating. The advantage of laser-induced hyperthermia over traditionally used heat sources such as ultrasound, microwave, or radiowave radiation lies in the ability to focus heat localization to the specific tumor tissue site. Neodymium:yttrium aluminum garnet (Nd:YAG) laser light transmitted through a fiberoptic cable to a diffusing quartz tip can induce such temperature increases leading to localized tissue destruction. Because breast cancer occurs with greatest frequency in the mature woman whose breast tissue has undergone glandular involution with fatty replacement, this study concentrates on determining the resultant laser energy heat distribution within fat and fibrofatty tissue. This investigation studied the time-temperature responses of ex vivo human breast and porcine fibrofatty tissue, which led to an in vivo subcutaneous porcine model for the practical demonstration of a laser hyperthermia treatment of small volumes of porcine mammary chain tissue.
Spatial recordings of the resultant temperature fields through time exhibited similar, reproducible thermal profiles in both ex vivo human breast and subcutaneous porcine fat. In vivo laser-produced temperature fields in porcine subcutaneous fat were comparable to those in the ex vivo analyses, and showed a histologically, sharply defined, and controllable volume of necrosis with no injury to adjacent tissues or to overlying skin.
Interstitially placed, fiberoptically delivered Nd:YAG laser energy is capable of controlled tissue denaturation to a defined volume for the treatment of small breast cancers. It is hoped that this minimally invasive approach, with further investigation and refinement, may lead to the effective treatment of small, well-defined breast cancers that are commonly diagnosed through stereographic mammography and stereotactic core biopsy. The juxtaposition of such a localized treatment modality with these increasingly used diagnostic tools is of considerable promise.
本研究描述了一种用于热消融小型乳腺癌的激光光纤间质输送系统的临床前开发情况。我们建议将该技术应用于目前用于诊断性核心活检的立体定向乳腺摄影仪器,以热消融疾病部位,实现最大的治疗效果、最小的可见表面变化、减少患者创伤并降低总体治疗成本。
激光热疗是一种旨在通过控制组织加热来实现肿瘤破坏的临床治疗方式。激光诱导热疗相对于传统使用的热源(如超声、微波或无线电波辐射)的优势在于能够将热定位聚焦到特定的肿瘤组织部位。通过光纤电缆传输到扩散石英尖端的钕钇铝石榴石(Nd:YAG)激光能够引起温度升高,从而导致局部组织破坏。由于乳腺癌在乳腺组织已发生腺性退化并被脂肪替代的成熟女性中最为常见,本研究着重于确定激光能量在脂肪和纤维脂肪组织中的热分布情况。本研究对离体人乳腺和猪纤维脂肪组织的时间 - 温度响应进行了研究,进而建立了一个体内皮下猪模型,用于实际演示对小体积猪乳腺链组织的激光热疗。
通过时间记录所得温度场的空间分布,发现离体人乳腺和皮下猪脂肪中的热分布相似且具有可重复性。猪皮下脂肪中体内激光产生的温度场与离体分析中的温度场相当,并且在组织学上显示出界限清晰、可控制的坏死区域,对相邻组织和覆盖皮肤均无损伤。
间质放置、通过光纤输送的Nd:YAG激光能量能够对特定体积的组织进行可控的变性处理,以治疗小型乳腺癌。希望这种微创方法经过进一步研究和改进后,能够有效治疗通过立体乳腺摄影和立体定向核心活检常见诊断出的小型、边界清晰的乳腺癌。将这种局部治疗方式与这些越来越常用的诊断工具相结合具有很大的前景。