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Endobronchial radiation therapy with or without neodymium yttrium aluminum garnet laser resection for managing malignant airway obstruction.

Cancer 1994 May 16
BACKGROUND: Previous reports have shown low-dose-rate (LDR) afterloading Ir-192 endobronchial radiation therapy (EnBRT) to effectively palliate symptoms in patients with malignant airway obstruction. The authors retrospectively assessed the consequences of LDR EnBRT with or without neodymium yttrium aluminum garnet (Nd:YAG) laser resection in 37 patients.

METHODS: Between February 1986 and June 1991, 37 patients with malignant airway obstruction were treated with LDR EnBRT at The Cleveland Clinic Foundation. Inclusion criteria for LDR EnBRT with or without Nd:YAG laser resection were patients with recurrent, symptomatic endobronchial lesions treated previously with external beam irradiation. Of the 37 patients, 21 patients with endobronchial lesions underwent Nd:YAG laser resection; 16 patients with mainly extrinsic lesions received EnBRT only. Before EnBRT, selected patients (7 of 16 in the nonlaser-treatment group and 14 of 21 in the laser-treatment group) received additional external beam treatments of 2000 cGy/10 fractions. The LDR afterloading Ir-192 technique was used to deliver approximately 30 Gy to a 1.0-cm radius target.

RESULTS: All patients had one or more of the following symptoms: 1) dyspnea, 2) fever, 3) cough, and 4) hemoptysis. Good-to-excellent symptom relief was apparent in 16 of 21 (76.2%) laser-treated patients and in 12 of 16 (75%) nonlaser-treated patients. Follow-up bronchoscopy in 28 patients revealed tumor regression in 22 (79%). Median survival time was 16.3 weeks in the laser group and 11.7 weeks in the nonlaser group (P = 0.36). Longer median survival times were noted in laser-treated (22.8 weeks) and nonlaser-treated (16.4 weeks) patients receiving additional external beam treatments. Exsanguination occurred in 7 of 21 (33.3%) laser-treated patients and in 4 of 16 (25%) nonlaser-treated patients. The only factor affecting the exsanguination rate was implant location: 6 of 11 (54.5%) patients had lesions in the right or left upper lobe.

CONCLUSIONS: EnBRT alone or with Nd:YAG laser resection provided good-to-excellent symptom palliation in these patients although a high rate of exsanguination occurred in both groups.

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