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Living Longer: Colon Cancer Patients Gain Time With Radiofrequency Ablation Treatment. CT Sofocleous, EN Petre, M Gonen, KT Brown, RH Thornton, AM Covey, LA Brody, W Alago, M D'Angelica, SB Solomon, Y Fong, NE Kemeny. Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY
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Living Longer: Colon Cancer Patients Gain Time With Radiofrequency Ablation Treatment CT Sofocleous, EN Petre, M Gonen, KT Brown, RH Thornton, AM Covey, LA Brody, W Alago, M D'Angelica, SB Solomon, Y Fong, NE Kemeny.Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY Abstract 107: “Radiofrequency Ablation of Recurrent Colorectal Cancer Hepatic Metastases After Hepatectomy” @ www.SIRmeeting. 35th Annual Scientific Meeting March 13–18, 2010, Tampa, FL.
Facts about Colon Cancer • Second leading cause of cancer-related death in the United States. • 150,000 new patients diagnosed each year. • Half of these patients will have cancer spread to their liver (liver metastases) at some point during the course of their disease. • Surgery is considered the best treatment for liver metastases but the majority of the patients are not candidates for surgery. • “In those (<25%) who undergo surgery, recurrence (a new spot of cancer coming back) is a serious problem. • Traditionally chemotherapy has been the only therapy.
Treatment for Colon Cancer Liver Metastases Surgery (10-25%) Chemotherapy: systemic / Local IR Treatment -Ablation -RFA, Cryo, other - Radioembolization - Chemoembolization sofoclec@mskcc.org
Interventional Treatment NO CUTS Minimally Invasive: Needles, Catheters Imaging Guidance FEWER complications/ Side effects Fast Recovery. GO HOME SAME DAY!
Radiofrequency Ablation A special Needle (electrode is placed and destroys the tumor locally in the liver with minimal effect on the surrounding normal tissue.
How does RF work? • Pt becomes electrical circuit. • Generator produces AC at 300-500 kHz (RF range). • Ionic agitation. • Frictional heating. • Protein denaturation, desiccation, coagulation necrosis. • Impedance rises.
Thermal Ablation Cooking with Heat • Heat induced cell death: • 48 oC: in 45 min. • 50-52 oC: after 4-6 min. • > 60 oC: Instantaneous cell death. • 100-110 oC: Vaporization, carbonization, charring.
Ablation Needle/Electrode: Shape of Burn sofoclec@mskcc.org
Ablation Changes under the Microscope sofoclec@mskcc.org
Who is a Good Patient For Ablation • Small Number of Tumors • Small Size of Tumor • Treatment of new tumors or enlarging Tumors after surgery or chemotherapy • Traditionally Ablation has been offered to Patients that cannot have Surgery • Ideal: Solitary Tumor < 3 cm
Patients that have tumor recurrence in their liver after surgery have limited therapy options. Those with less than 3 tumors under 5 cm each may benefit from ablation. “Radiofrequency Ablation of Recurrent Colorectal Cancer Hepatic Metastases After Hepatectomy.”
“Radiofrequency Ablation of Recurrent Colorectal Cancer Hepatic Metastases After Hepatectomy.” • We ablated 71 CLM that developed after liver surgery in 56 patients. We calculated: • Successful ablation: Burn size covering the entire tumor on 4-6 week post-treatment CT • Complications • Cancer coming back at the site of ablation: local tumor progression (LTP) and • Overall patient survival
Risk Factors: Modified clinical risk score (CRS) • Tumor Size (>3 cm). • Disease Free Interval (<12 months). • Number of tumors > 1. • LN + primary.
Follow-up Imaging: Success /No LTP 4 weeks 24 months 47 months PRE
Repeat Ablation Treats Tumor Coming Back (*includes all the ablations performed for the same target tumor
Tumor-free Interval by CRS p<0.01
Overall Patients Survival after RF Additional Length of Life after Failure of Surgery
Overall Survival by CRS p=0.03
Conclusion: • RF ablation can treat colon cancer liver metastases that come back after surgery. • This can significantly prolong life of patients with limited treatment options. • The combination of a low clinical risk score, surveillance with imaging and repeat ablation to treat LTP are associated with better outcomes