Abstract

Background Stereotactic radiosurgery (Cyberknife; Accuray Incorporated; Sunnyvale, CA) is a treatment option for patients who are medically unfit to undergo lung tumor resection. For precise tumor ablation, the Cyberknife requires fiducial marker placement in or near the target tumor. Fiducial placement under transthoracic CT guidance is associated with a high risk of iatrogenic pneumothorax. Electromagnetic navigation bronchoscopy (ENB) may offer a less morbid alternative to accurately deploy fiducials to bronchoscopically invisible peripheral lung lesions. Objective Open-label, feasibility study to assess fiducial placement in peripheral lung tumors by ENB. Method Consecutive patients with peripheral lung tumors and who were evaluated to be nonsurgical candidates underwent fiducial placement under ENB. This procedure was considered successful if fiducials were placed in or near the tumors and remained in place without migration for radiosurgery to proceed. The need for alternative or additional intrathoracic fiducial placement was documented as procedure failure. Results A total of 39 fiducials markers were successfully deployed in eight of nine patients (89%). Of these eight successful cases, seven had fiducials placed directly within the tumor (88%). At Cyberknife planning, 7 to 10 days after fiducial placement, 35 of 39 fiducial markers (90%) were still in place and were adequate to allow radiosurgery to proceed. No immediate bronchoscopic complications were observed. One patient had a COPD exacerbation. Another patient returned within 1 day with transient, self-limiting fever. Conclusions ENB can be used to deploy fiducial markers for Cyberknife radiosurgery of lung tumors safely and accurately without the complications associated with transthoracic placement. Stereotactic radiosurgery (Cyberknife; Accuray Incorporated; Sunnyvale, CA) is a treatment option for patients who are medically unfit to undergo lung tumor resection. For precise tumor ablation, the Cyberknife requires fiducial marker placement in or near the target tumor. Fiducial placement under transthoracic CT guidance is associated with a high risk of iatrogenic pneumothorax. Electromagnetic navigation bronchoscopy (ENB) may offer a less morbid alternative to accurately deploy fiducials to bronchoscopically invisible peripheral lung lesions. Open-label, feasibility study to assess fiducial placement in peripheral lung tumors by ENB. Consecutive patients with peripheral lung tumors and who were evaluated to be nonsurgical candidates underwent fiducial placement under ENB. This procedure was considered successful if fiducials were placed in or near the tumors and remained in place without migration for radiosurgery to proceed. The need for alternative or additional intrathoracic fiducial placement was documented as procedure failure. A total of 39 fiducials markers were successfully deployed in eight of nine patients (89%). Of these eight successful cases, seven had fiducials placed directly within the tumor (88%). At Cyberknife planning, 7 to 10 days after fiducial placement, 35 of 39 fiducial markers (90%) were still in place and were adequate to allow radiosurgery to proceed. No immediate bronchoscopic complications were observed. One patient had a COPD exacerbation. Another patient returned within 1 day with transient, self-limiting fever. ENB can be used to deploy fiducial markers for Cyberknife radiosurgery of lung tumors safely and accurately without the complications associated with transthoracic placement.

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