Abstract

PurposeTo evaluate the safety and effectiveness of percutaneous image-guided thermal ablation (IGTA) for juxtacardiac lung tumors. Materials and MethodsThis bi-institutional retrospective cohort study included 23 consecutive patients (13 [57%] male; mean age, 55 years ± 18) with 30 juxtacardiac lung tumors located ≤10 mm from the pericardium treated in 28 IGTA sessions (25 sessions of cryoablation and 3 sessions of microwave ablation) between April 2008 and August 2022. The primary outcome was any adverse cardiac event within 90 days after ablation. Secondary outcomes included noncardiac adverse events, local tumor progression–free survival (LT-PFS), and the cumulative incidence of local tumor progression with death as a competing risk. Two tumors treated without curative intent or follow-up imaging were considered in the safety analysis but not in the progression analysis. ResultsThe median imaging follow-up duration was 22 months (interquartile range [IQR], 10–53 months). Primary technical success was achieved in 25 (89%) ablations. No adverse cardiac events attributable to IGTA occurred. One patient experienced a phrenic nerve injury. The median LT-PFS duration was 59 months (IQR, 32–73 months). At 1, 3, and 5 years, LT-PFS was 90% (95% CI, 78%–100%), 74% (CI, 53%–100%), and 45% (CI, 20%–97%), respectively, and the cumulative incidence of local tumor progression was 4.3% (CI, 0.29%–19%), 11% (CI, 1.6%–30%), and 26% (CI, 3.3%–58%), respectively. ConclusionsIGTA is safe and effective for lung tumors located ≤10 mm from the pericardium. No adverse cardiac events were not observed within 90 days after ablation.

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