Abstract

ObjectiveTo determine the early treatment response after microwave ablation (MWA) of inoperable lung neoplasms using the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) value calculated 24 h after the ablation.Materials and methodsThis retrospective study included 47 patients with 68 lung lesions, who underwent percutaneous MWA from January 2008 to December 2017. Evaluation of the lesions was done using MRI including DWI sequence with ADC value calculation pre-ablation and 24 h post-ablation. DWI-MR was performed with b values (50, 400, 800 mm2/s). The post-ablation follow-up was performed using chest CT and/or MRI within 24 h following the procedure; after 3, 6, 9, and 12 months; and every 6 months onwards to determine the local tumor response. The post-ablation ADC value changes were compared to the end response of the lesions.ResultsForty-seven patients (mean age: 63.8 ± 14.2 years, 25 women) with 68 lesions having a mean tumor size of 1.5 ± 0.9 cm (range: 0.7–5 cm) were evaluated. Sixty-one lesions (89.7%) showed a complete treatment response, and the remaining 7 lesions (10.3%) showed a local progression (residual activity). There was a statistically significant difference regarding the ADC value measured 24 h after the ablation between the responding (1.7 ± 0.3 × 10−3 mm2/s) and non-responding groups (1.4 ± 0.3 × 10−3 mm2/s) with significantly higher values in the responding group (p = 0.001). A suggested ADC cut-off value of 1.42 could be used as a reference point for the post-ablation response prediction (sensitivity: 66.67%, specificity: 84.21%, PPV: 66.7%, and NPV: 84.2%). No significant difference was reported regarding the ADC value performed before the ablation as a factor for the prognosis of treatment response (p = 0.86).ConclusionADC value assessment following ablation may allow the early prediction of treatment efficacy after MWA of inoperable lung neoplasms.Key Points• ADC value calculated 24 h post-treatment may allow the early prediction of MWA efficacy as a treatment of pulmonary tumors and can be used in the early immediate post-ablation imaging follow-up.• The pre-treatment ADC value of lung neoplasms is not different between the responding and non-responding tumors.

Highlights

  • Percutaneous local tumor ablation under image guidance is a minimally invasive therapeutic option for the management of inoperable primary and metastatic lung tumors, using different ablative tools including radiofrequency (RF), microwave (MW), and cryoablation

  • CT examination has long been used for the assessment of tumor ablation response after local ablation

  • The exact time of the early post-ablation Diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (DW-MRI) changes is extremely variable among different institutes and ranges from the first day to the 8th week after ablation based on various institutional protocols [7, 8, 16,17,18]

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Summary

Introduction

Percutaneous local tumor ablation under image guidance is a minimally invasive therapeutic option for the management of inoperable primary and metastatic lung tumors, using different ablative tools including radiofrequency (RF), microwave (MW), and cryoablation. The rate of local tumor residual and/or progression after the ablation may reach up to 30%. Early post-ablation detection of local tumor residual or progression is of extreme value to allow early interference in such cases [1,2,3]. The ablated lesion in the early CT scan apparently looks larger than the preablation size as a part of the normal lung parenchyma surrounding the lesion is ablated within the context of safety margin giving a larger ablation zone. This zone of ablation subsequently shrinks over time [4, 5]. The second limiting factor is the region of ground-glass opacity surrounding the ablated lesion which may be accompanied by a parenchymal lung hemorrhage due to the mechanical injury of lung parenchyma during the ablation procedure [6]

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