Popis: |
Unfortunately, as of yet, most lung cancers are not operable as soon as diagnosis is available; in these situations chemo- and radio-therapy still play a key role, albeit palliative, improving survival rate moderately, but are not lacking in toxic effects, especially in case of concurrent pathology, reduced cardio-respiratory functionality or being advanced in years. Therefore thermal ablation mini-invasive techniques, already employed as ancillary treatments of hepatic cancer or in place of surgery, have been performed for these pathologies.Aim of this work is to define the current state of the art for Radio-Frequency Ablation (RFA) to be performed on non-resectable lung cancer, also by means of a thorough review of international literature, from which to infer purposes, suggestions, methodologies, effectiveness, safety, complications and achievements, also in terms of the possible improvement of life quality and/or survival expectancy.Patients have been carefully selected. Pulmonary nodules have been treated with TC or echo-guided percutaneous thermal ablation and, afterwards, evaluated by radiological and clinical (sometimes histopathological) follow-up.The size of the RFA-treated nodules is necessary in order to evaluate full or partial necrosis extent and, therefore, average survival rate.Availability of more extensive and homogeneous case histories, as well as standard follow-up (TC and/or histopathological sampling) methodologies, is required. Nevertheless several authors agree that RFA is a safe and effective technique within the framework of a substitutive or complementary treatment of non-operable lung cancer. The best results can be achieved for cancers less than 3 cm wide; RFA, performed before chemo- and/or radio-therapy, plays a neoadjuvant role for larger cancers, decreasing cancer volume and weakening the symptoms. |