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Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director, Interventional Vascular Unit
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Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Dec 23, 2015

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Page 1: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology

Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology

Lancaster Radiology AssociatesCo-Director, Interventional Vascular Unit

Page 2: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Objectives

• 1- Identify currently available IR procedures related to cancer care at LGH

• 2- Enhance medical staff knowledge of such procedures

• 3- Discuss current IR cancer treatments

Page 3: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Palliative and curative therapies

• Diagnosis• Lung• Genitourinary• Gastrointestinal

Page 4: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

DIAGNOSIS through Image-Guided Biopsies

• Often one of the initial procedures used to obtain a tissue diagnosis

• Multiple modalities including Computed Tomography, Ultrasound, and Fluoroscopy

• Alone or in combination• Often correlate with PET scan to identify

“active” sites

Page 5: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Biopsy Technique

• Often coaxial with “outer” introducer needle and “inner” biopsy needle

• Need a “window”; Want to obtain an adequate tissue sample for diagnosis but need to utilize a safe approach

• May use conscious sedation along with local anesthesia

Page 6: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Solitary pulmonary nodule

Page 7: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

PET scan

Page 8: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

PET CT fusion

Page 9: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

CT guided Lung Biopsy

Page 10: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Lung Biopsy

Page 11: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Ultrasound biopsies

• Require hand-eye coordination• May be used for random sampling, i.e. for

gross liver biopsy• For focal lesions, often in difficult to access

locations, if poorly seen on CT scan, or if lesion is “mobile”

Page 12: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Ultrasound guided biopsy of a focal liver mass

Page 13: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

X-ray guided biopsy

• Especially useful when patient positioning is limited; can rotate and angle the tube to obtain an approach for lesion access

• Advantage of real time imaging

Page 14: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Fluoroscopic vertebral body biopsy

Page 15: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Rotational angiography and Xper CT

Technology in new Philips angio equipment that combines CT and 3D-imaging.

Enhances IR procedures by allowing you to import previous MRI or CT data and fuse it with angiographic studies.

Allows the interventionalist to use fluoroscopy and apply it to a CT image for challenging access.

Page 16: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Planning images

Page 17: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Progress images

Page 18: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Lung

PalliativeTunneled pleural cathetersThermal ablation of destructive chest wall lesions

CurativeRFA of unresectable lung cancers or lung metastases

Page 19: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Tunneled pleural catheter

Page 20: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Painful Chest Wall Tumors

Page 21: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

RFA

Page 22: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

RFA lung cancer

• Early NSCLC or metastases in those deemed NOT to be surgical candidates

• Could have a poor functional status, abnormal PFTs’, Octogenarians? etc.

• Relapse in Radiation field• Painful bone metastasis• Chest wall invasion

Page 23: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

RFA lung cancer

Page 24: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Lung Cancer survival

• If untreated, median survival 9-12 months.• Surgical resection 5 year 60-70%• RFA or Radiation 5 year 30-50%

• RFA 1 yr: 83-90%; 2 year 48-83%

Page 25: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

LGH statistics

• 20 tumors treated with RFA; 16 patients.• Treatment goals met in 15/16 patients. All but

one patient was treated for cure. • 4/16 patients required an additional ablation.• Stable or without recurrence for up to 26

months.• 1 unrelated death two days after treatment.

Cardiac arrest.

Page 26: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Genitourinary (GU)

• Palliative– Percutanous nephrostomy– Dialysis catheters– Fistula or hemodialysis access maintenance

• Curative– Thermal ablation of renal cell cancer

Page 27: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

GU procedures

• Percutaneous access to the collecting system for benign or malignant obstructions, stone disease, or urosepsis

• Can place internal double J ureteral stents from percutaneous access

• Can provide access for future stone removal and/or manipulation

Page 28: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Percutaneous Nephrostomy

Page 29: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

PCN

Page 30: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Hemodialysis Catheter

Page 31: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Fistula

Page 32: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Cryoablation of Renal Cancer

Page 33: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

CT cryoablation

Page 34: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Cryoablation

• Argon gas for freezing; Helium for thawing.• Multiple probes; RFA just a single probe.• Less risk of damage to collecting system.• Greater risk of bleeding compared with RFA

(coagulative necrosis).• -20 to -40 degrees Celsius. Cell death.• Can better identify treated zone.

Page 35: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Survival

• Stage I RCC- surgery with partial nephrectomy or nephrectomy 80+% 5 year survival

• Difficult to do much better for early disease• Stage I RCC treated with RFA for 3 cm tumors

or smaller 94% 2 year survival. Decreased survival as tumor size increases beyond 3 cm.

Page 36: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

36

Is RCC Cryoablation Effective?

1 Littrup, J Vasc Interv Radiol 2007; Atwell, J Urol 2010; Rodriguez, Cardiovasc Interv Radiol 2011

Littrup Atwell Rodriguez89%

90%

91%

92%

93%

94%

95%

96%

97%

98%

92%

94%

98%

Efficacy

Series 1

Loca

l Tum

or C

ontr

ol A

fter

O

ne C

ryoa

blati

on T

reat

men

t

19 months 26 months 24 months

Page 37: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

LGH statistics

• 7 tumors treated• 6/7 Renal cell cancer. 1/7 benign oncocytoma.• 6/7 no signs of recurrence. 1/7 partially

treated and opted for surveillance.

Page 38: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Gastrointestinal (GI)

• Palliative– Peritoneal catheters– Gastric tubes– Cholecystostomy drains– Biliary stents

• Locoregional control– Catheter-based embolization– Percutaneous thermal ablation

Page 39: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Peritoneal Catheter

Page 40: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Percutaneous Gastrostomy

Page 41: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Acute Cholecystitis

Page 42: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Percutaneous Cholecystostomy

Page 43: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Biliary Obstruction

Page 44: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Biliary Wallstent

Page 45: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

UnresectableLiver

Dominant

Image-Guided Therapy for Hepatic Malignancies

Page 46: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Definitions

• Liver-dominant neoplasm: malignancy in which the hepatic component is the only site of disease or the dominant site most likely to lead to patient morbidity or mortality

Page 47: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

What’s so good about embolization or chemoembolization?

• Minimally-invasive loco-regional treatment• Spares the patient the morbidity of surgery,

radiation, or systemic therapy• Achieves tumor necrosis• Increases drug concentration delivered and

dwell time of agent(s)• Decreases systemic toxicity

Page 48: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Definitions

• Embolization: refers to blocking arteries by particles alone

• Oily Chemoembolization: infusion of chemotherapeutic agents with Ethiodized oil followed by embolic agents

• Drug-eluting beads: chemoembolization with calibrated microspheres that release drug over time

Page 49: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Definitions

• Tumor Ablation: direct application of thermal or chemical therapies to tumor(s) to eradicate or substantially destroy it– Chemical: ethanol or acetic acid– Thermal: application of energy to cause tumor

necrosis. Examples include radiofrequency ablation (RFA), microwave, cryotherapy, high-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU)

Page 50: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Why consider tumor ablation?

• Patients are living longer and presenting later in life with cancer.

• Co-morbid conditions are a major factor in considering patients for surgical resection.

• Minimally invasive therapies are in demand.• Tumor ablation offers a chance for cure without

surgery.• Important psychological benefits to patients

instead of just waiting and seeing what happens.

Page 51: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Hepatocellular Carcinoma

• Fewer than 20% of patients are candidates for resection due to cirrhosis.

• Transplantation only curative option for those with limited disease (one tumor < 5 cm, or three tumors < 3 cm).

• Choice of therapy depends on overall size, number, and location of tumors.

Page 52: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Chemoembolization of HCC: Randomized Trials

1) Lo et al., Hepatology 2002

80 Patients, 80% hep. B +, 7 cm tumors (60% multifocal)

TACE Supportive care

57, 31, 26% 32, 11, 3% (1, 2, 3 year survival)

2) Llovet et al., Lancet 2002

112 Patients, 80-90% hep. C +, 5 cm tumors (70% multifocal)

TACE Supportive care

82, 63% 63, 27% (1, 2 year survival)

Page 53: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

surgery

resectable

<2cmimage q3 months

>2cmembo/ablate

image q3 months

OLT candidate1 tumor ² 5cm

2-3 tumors ²3cm

<3 cm ablate3-8 cm embo/ablate

>8cm embosorafenib?

Childs A/BBCLC A-C

PS 0-2Labs OK

death talksorafenib?

Childs COkuda 3PS 3-4

bad labs

Not Surgical Candidate

Hepatoma

Hepatoma

Page 54: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Colorectal Metastases

• Median Survival for untreated 6-13 months• Survival for most effective chemotherapy is 20

months• Resecting metastases increases 5-year survival

from 0-1% to 31-58%, perhaps even higher, more recent studies suggest.

• Only 5-20% eligible for surgical resection.

Page 55: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

COLON CANCERChemoembolization: Phase II Trials

BCLC NWU U Penn1 Frankfurt2

#PTS 40 30 120 463

Disease Control 63% 63% 43% 63%

Med. Surv. 24 mo. 29 mo. 27 mo. 38 mo.iology 2009

Page 56: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Colorectal mets and RF ablation

• RF ablation useful in patients not eligible for surgical resection, however, multiple independent studies showed that survival rates approach those of surgical resection.

• Local control best achieved in tumors 3.5 cm in size or smaller; goal of RFA is achieve a 1-cm ablation zone.

• RFA mortality is < 0.5% compared with 17-37% for surgical resection.

Page 57: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Colorectal Metastases

[3-6 months chemo]resect

Resectable

<3 cm ablate3-6 cm embo/ablate

>6 cm embosystemic

liver dominantunresectable

labs and PS OK

systemic

not liver dominantOR

contraindication to embo

Colon Mets

Page 58: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Neuroendocrine Tumors

• Only 5% of carcinoid tumors• Up to 90% of gastrinomas• Patients can be plagued by unregulated

hormonal secretions of their tumors.• Control with somatostatin agents.• Those with hormonal production often have

bulk liver disease, a contraindication to surgery.

Page 59: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

NET

clinic/labs/imagingq 3-6 months

No sx on Sandostain-LARLFTs normal

tumor burden <50%

resectablesurgery

unresectableembo

[ablate]

Sx despite SandostatinOR abnl LFTs

OR tumor burden 50%

Liver dominant

palliative embo

systemic rx

Not liver dominant

NET

Page 60: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Summary

• Interventional Radiology has a critical role in the care of cancer patients and offers both palliative and curative therapies.

• Although many of these therapies are not first line treatment, they should not be considered rescue therapy either. Rather, these interventions should be considered routinely during the evaluation and management of the cancer patient.

• There is increasing evidence to support improved survival and improved quality of life with combination therapies; for example, ablation with adjuvant chemotherapy, or chemoembolization with adjuvant radiation therapy.

Page 61: Minimally Invasive Cancer Therapies in Interventional Radiology Chief, Vascular and Interventional Radiology Lancaster Radiology Associates Co-Director,

Thank you

• Lancaster Radiology Associates 299-4173• Interventional Radiology 544-4929• Consultations through Centralized Scheduling

at 544-5941.