SIU Academy® - Official eLearning Portal of SIU (Société Internationale d'Urologie)

SIU-WJU Article of the Month – April 2017
Irreversible electroporation of small renal masses: How good is it?
Speaker(s):
Naveen Arora
,
Naveen Arora
Affiliations:
Steve Riggs
Steve Riggs
Affiliations:
SIU Academy®. Presenters F. 04/01/17; 179703 Topic: Surgery
Naveen Arora
Steve Riggs
Login now to access Regular content available to all registered users.

To have an exclusive access to the entire content available on SIU Academy, become an SIU Member here.

You may also access SIU content "anytime, anywhere" with the FREE SIU ACADEMY App for iOS and Android.
Abstract
Discussion Forum (0)
Rate & Comment (0)
Purpose

To report on the first short-term oncologic outcomes of percutaneous irreversible electroporation for small renal masses.

Methods

Patients with cT1a renal masses treated with irreversible electroporation from April 2013 through December 2016 were reviewed. Small, low complexity tumors were generally selected for irreversible electroporation using the NanoKnife® System (Angiodynamics, Latham, NY, USA). Surveillance imaging was performed post-operatively, and survival analysis was completed using the Kaplan–Meier method.

Results

A total of 42 tumors in 41 patients underwent irreversible electroporation. Mean tumor size was 2.0 cm with a median R.E.N.A.L nephrometry score of 5. Twenty-nine patients (71%) were discharged the same day of the procedure and no major (Clavien grade II or higher) intraoperative or post-operative complications occurred. Initial treatment success rate was 93%; our three failures (7%) underwent salvage radiofrequency ablation. With a mean follow-up of 22 months, 2-year local recurrence-free survival was 83% for patients with biopsy confirmed renal cell carcinoma, 87% with biopsy confirmed or a history of renal cell carcinoma, and 92% for the intent-to-treat cohort.

Conclusions

Although with low morbidity, in comparison to extirpation and conventional thermal ablation technologies, irreversible electroporation has suboptimal short-term local disease control results in this series of small, low complexity tumors. Larger series and longer follow-up will determine the durability of this modality.

Keywords

Kidney neoplasms  Carcinoma  Renal cell  Electroporation  Survival rate  Complications 
Purpose

To report on the first short-term oncologic outcomes of percutaneous irreversible electroporation for small renal masses.

Methods

Patients with cT1a renal masses treated with irreversible electroporation from April 2013 through December 2016 were reviewed. Small, low complexity tumors were generally selected for irreversible electroporation using the NanoKnife® System (Angiodynamics, Latham, NY, USA). Surveillance imaging was performed post-operatively, and survival analysis was completed using the Kaplan–Meier method.

Results

A total of 42 tumors in 41 patients underwent irreversible electroporation. Mean tumor size was 2.0 cm with a median R.E.N.A.L nephrometry score of 5. Twenty-nine patients (71%) were discharged the same day of the procedure and no major (Clavien grade II or higher) intraoperative or post-operative complications occurred. Initial treatment success rate was 93%; our three failures (7%) underwent salvage radiofrequency ablation. With a mean follow-up of 22 months, 2-year local recurrence-free survival was 83% for patients with biopsy confirmed renal cell carcinoma, 87% with biopsy confirmed or a history of renal cell carcinoma, and 92% for the intent-to-treat cohort.

Conclusions

Although with low morbidity, in comparison to extirpation and conventional thermal ablation technologies, irreversible electroporation has suboptimal short-term local disease control results in this series of small, low complexity tumors. Larger series and longer follow-up will determine the durability of this modality.

Keywords

Kidney neoplasms  Carcinoma  Renal cell  Electroporation  Survival rate  Complications 
Code of conduct/disclaimer available in General Terms & Conditions

By clicking “Accept Terms & all Cookies” or by continuing to browse, you agree to the storing of third-party cookies on your device to enhance your user experience and agree to the user terms and conditions of this learning management system (LMS).

Cookie Settings
Accept Terms & all Cookies