Abstract

In recent years endoscopically controlled laser-induced thermal therapy (LITT) has been increasingly accepted as a minimally invasive method for palliation of advanced or recurrent head and neck or gastrointestinal cancer. Previous studies have shown that adjuvant chemotherapy can potentiate endoscopic laser thermal ablation of obstructing tumors leading to improved palliation in advanced cancer patients. Eight patients with recurrent head and neck tumors volunteered to enroll as part of an ongoing phase II LITT clinical trial, and also elected to be treated with systemic chemotherapy (cisplatin, 80 mg/m2) followed 24 h later by palliative laser thermal ablation. Laser treatments were repeated in patients with residual disease or recurrence for a total of 27 LITT sessions. Four of the 8 patients treated with laser thermal chemotherapy remained alive after a median follow-up of 12 months. Of the 12 tumor sites treated, complete responses were located in the oral cavity (3), oropharynx (1), hypopharynx (1), maxillary sinus (1), and median survival for these patients was 9.5 months. This initial experience with cisplatinum-based laser chemotherapy indicates both safety and therapeutic potential for palliation of advanced head and neck cancer but this must be confirmed by longer follow-up in a larger cohort of patients.

Highlights

  • Laser induced thermal therapy (LITT) using the Nd:YAG laser via endoscopic fiberoptics has been increasingly accepted as an effective palliative method for tumor ablation [1,2,3,4]

  • Local recurrence after endoscopic laser thermal palliation is frequently related to residual disease from untreated areas in the tumor margins

  • Repeated laser thermal ablation sessions are usually needed for effective palliation to induce eventually tumor remission using laser-induced thermal therapy (LITT)

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Summary

Introduction

Laser induced thermal therapy (LITT) using the Nd:YAG laser via endoscopic fiberoptics has been increasingly accepted as an effective palliative method for tumor ablation [1,2,3,4]. Based on reports that chemotherapy enhances palliative endoscopic laser therapy in advanced esophageal and gastric cases [6,7,8,9,10,11], the authors began a pilot study from July 1994 to July 1998, testing combined cisplatin and laser induced thermal therapy in 8 patients with recurrent head and neck tumors who were not candidates for conventional surgery and radiation treatment.

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