AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines the effectiveness of thermal ablation in treating tumors from oligometastatic breast cancer, focusing on bone, liver, lung, and soft tissue metastases in 33 women.
  • Results showed a median progression-free survival (PFS) of 10 months, with 24% of patients experiencing no disease during a 39-month follow-up; factors like tumor margins, estrogen receptor status, and patient age influenced outcomes.
  • The findings suggest that achieving at least a 5 mm margin during ablation can prevent local tumor progression, particularly in younger patients and those with estrogen receptor-positive tumors.

Article Abstract

Purpose: To describe ablation of bone, liver, lung, and soft tissue tumors from oligometastatic breast cancer and to define predictors of local progression and progression-free survival (PFS).

Materials And Methods: A total of 33 women (mean age 52 ± 12 years old; range, 28-69 years), underwent 46 thermal ablations of liver (n = 35), lung (n = 7), and bone/soft tissue (n = 4) metastases. Mean tumor diameter was 18 ± 15 mm (range, 6-50 mm). Ablations were performed to eradicate all evident sites of disease (n = 24) or to control growing sites in the setting of other stable or responding sites of disease (n = 22). Patient characteristics, ablation margins, imaging responses, and cases of PFS were assessed. Follow-up imaging was performed using contrast-enhanced computed tomography (CT), magnetic resonance (MR) imaging, or positron-emission tomography/ CT.

Results: Median PFS was 10 months (95% confidence interval [CI], 6.2 -14.5 months), and time to local progression was 11 months (95% CI, 5-16 months). Eight patients (24%) maintained no evidence of disease during a median follow-up period of 39 months. Ablation margin ≥5 mm was associated with no local tumor progression. Longer PFS was noted in estrogen receptor-positive patients (12 vs 4 months; P = .037) and younger patients (12 vs 4 months; P = .039) treated to eradicate all sites of disease (13 vs 5 months; P = .05). Eighteen patients (55%) developed new metastases during study follow-up.

Conclusions: Thermal ablation of oligometastatic pulmonary, hepatic, bone, and soft tissue tumors can eliminate local tumor progression if margins are ≥5 mm. Longer PFS was observed in patients who were estrogen receptor-positive and patients who were younger and in whom all sites of disease were eradicated.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jvir.2020.02.016DOI Listing

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