Abstract

PurposeThe goal of our study was to determine the influence of ultrasound (US)-coupled volume navigation on the use of computed tomography (CT) during minimally-invasive radiofrequency and microwave ablation procedures of liver lesions. MethodTwenty-five patients with 40 liver lesions of different histological origin were retrospectively analysed. Lesions were ablated following standard protocol, using 1) conventional US-guidance, 2) manual registered volume navigation (mVNav), 3) automatic registered (aVNav) or 4) CT-guidance. In case of ultrasonographically inconspicuous lesions, conventional US-guidance was abandoned and mVNav was used. If mVNav was also unsuccessful, the procedure was either continued with aVNav or CT-guidance. The number, size and location of the lesions targeted using the different approaches were documented. ResultsOf the 40 lesions, sixteen (40.0 %) could be targeted with conventional US-guidance only, sixteen (40.0 %) with mVNav, three (7.5 %) with aVNav and five (12.5 %) only through the use of CT-guidance. Of the three alternatives (mVNav, aVNav and CT only) the mean size of the lesions targeted using mVNav (9.1 ± 4.6 mm) was significantly smaller from those targeted using US-guidance only (20.4 ± 9.4 mm; p < 0.001). The location of the lesions did not influence the selection of the modality used to guide the ablation. ConclusionsIn our cohort, mVNav allowed the ablation procedure to become less dependent on the use of CT. mVNav supported the ablation of lesions smaller than those that could be ablated with US only and doubled the application of minimally-invasive US-guided ablations.

Highlights

  • The success of radiofrequency (RFA) and microwave ablation (MWA) procedures is directly dependent on accurate lesion localization and applicator placement

  • RFA and MWA procedures are generally performed under image guidance of ultrasound (US), computed tomography (CT) or magnetic resonance (MR) imaging [1,2]

  • Image data sets used for manual registered volume navigation (mVNav) were derived from CT or MR

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Summary

Introduction

The success of radiofrequency (RFA) and microwave ablation (MWA) procedures is directly dependent on accurate lesion localization and applicator placement. Navigation approaches help overcome all kinds of shortcomings of interventional imaging modalities such as fluorescence imaging, gamma-ray guidance, and US [13,14,15,16,17,18]. For the latter, volume based navigation (VNav) can be realized by manual and/or automatic co-registration of US-images with (pre-)interventional acquired CT- or MR-imaging data sets [19,20,21,22]

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