PURPOSE
To assess the feasibility of percutaneous multiprobe breast
cryoablation (BC) for diverse presentations of cancers that remained in situ
after BC.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
After breast magnetic resonance (MR) imaging and thorough
consultation, patients underwent BC after giving informed consent. This
study was approved by the institutional review board. In 12 BC sessions, 22
breast cancer foci (stages I–IV) were treated in 11 patients who
refused surgery by using multiple 2.4-mm cryoprobes. Five patients had
recurrent disease and six had new diagnoses. With use of only local
anesthesia, six patients were treated with ultrasonographic (US) guidance
and five were treated with both computed tomographic (CT) and US guidance.
Saline injections and warming bags were used to protect the skin. Procedure
success was defined as 1 cm visible ice beyond all tumor margins. MR imaging
and/or clinical follow-up were available for up to 72 months after BC.
RESULTS
US produced sufficient ice visualization for small tumors, whereas CT
helped confirm overall ice extent. The mean pretreatment breast tumor
diameter was 1.7 cm ± 1.2 (range, 0.5–5.8 cm), and an
average of 3.1 cryoprobes produced 100% procedural success with mean
ice diameters of 5.1 cm ± 2.2 (range, 2.0–10.0 cm). No
significant complications, retraction, or scarring were noted. Biopsies at
the margins of the cryoablation site immediately after BC and at follow-up
were all negative. No local recurrences have been noted at an average
imaging follow-up of 18 months.
CONCLUSIONS
In conjunction with thorough pre- and postablation MR imaging,
CT/US-guided multiprobe BC safely achieved 1 cm visible ice beyond tumor
margins with minimal discomfort, good cosmesis, and no short-term local
tumor recurrences.
Percutaneous hepatic cryotherapy is a well-visualized, safe procedure that produces very low local recurrence rates, even for tumors near vasculature and diameters over 3 cm. Cryoablation deserves to be in the armamentarium of percutaneous hepatic ablation, especially with careful patient selection for tumors <4 cm and patients with platelet counts >100,000. Percutaneous hepatic cryoablation represents a highly flexible technique with particular benefits near central biliary structures and/or adjacent crucial structures.
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