Peritoneal Cancer Index (PCI) has been recognized as an independent prognostic indicator for long-term outcomes. It also influences the likelihood of complete cytoreduction, another principal determinant of long-term survival. The objective of this study was to evaluate the utility of preoperative CT in estimating PCI during the patient selection process. The efficacy of CT in demonstrating peritoneal disease was evaluated by comparing the radiological and intraoperative lesion size and PCI scores using the Wilcoxon signed-rank test. Tumor distribution was assessed in each abdominopelvic region as tumor present versus absent. The sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value were calculated in each abdominopelvic region. Overall, where CT identifies the presence of disease, it portrayed lesion size accurately in 60%, underestimated in 33%, and overestimated in 7% of cases. Analysis of individual abdominopelvic regions demonstrated a statistically significant difference between radiologically and intraoperatively visualized lesion sizes (P < 0.05) except in the epigastrium, left upper, and left flank regions. The sensitivity of CT in detecting peritoneal implants was influenced by lesion size. Small nodules (<0.5 cm) were visualized on CT with only a sensitivity of 11%, which is in contrast to 94% with nodules exceeding 5 cm. Radiological PCI scores significantly underestimated intraoperative PCI (P < 0.001). This study demonstrated that the sensitivity of CT in detecting peritoneal implants was influenced by lesion size and CT PCI significantly underestimated clinical PCI. The role of CT in refining patient selection and improving prognosis remains to be closely evaluated.
Percutaneous lung RFA may play a useful role in nonsurgical candidates with colorectal pulmonary metastases. However, the survival benefit of this interventional procedure for patients with a pulmonary metastasis >3 cm was limited.
Image-guided pulmonary RFA is a safe minimally invasive therapy modality with acceptable morbidity. Ablated lesion size usually exceeds the dimensions of the initial tumor for the first 3 months after ablation and continuously shrinks thereafter.
Percutaneous imaging-guided RFA of multiple colorectal pulmonary metastases is a minimally invasive treatment option with modest morbidity. A significant proportion of patients show good evidence of successful local control at 1 year.
This analysis confirms that RFA of lung metastases may achieve long-term survival in nonsurgical candidates with an acceptable complication rate hence supporting its incorporation into the oncosurgical management of lung metastases for the purposes of cure, stabilization and disease prolongation.
CRS combined with PIC was associated with improved survival in patients with less extensive previous surgery and diffuse peritoneal adenomucinosis histopathological type.
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