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Case Reports
. 2011 Dec;140(6):1633-1637.
doi: 10.1378/chest.11-0459.

Percutaneous cryoablation for pulmonary nodules in the residual lung after pneumonectomy: report of two cases

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Case Reports

Percutaneous cryoablation for pulmonary nodules in the residual lung after pneumonectomy: report of two cases

Yoshikane Yamauchi et al. Chest. 2011 Dec.

Abstract

Lung cancers in the residual lungs of patients who have undergone pneumonectomies are often unresectable, primarily because of the risks of overt pulmonary function losses. Percutaneous cryoablation of lung tumors is a potentially minimally invasive technique that has recently been used in the treatment of lung cancers and metastatic lung tumors. Here, we present two patients who had previously undergone pneumonectomies, in whom lung cancers in the residual lungs were treated by cryoablation. In both patients, the procedures were performed safely without any complications, such as airway bleeding, hemothoraces, or pneumothoraces. The changes in pulmonary functions after the procedures were minimal: % vital capacity (-1% and -4%), and %FEV(1) (-1% and +10%) in the first and second patients, respectively. The performance statuses were maintained at zero in both patients after cryoablation. In the first patient, local control has been maintained for 4 years. In the second patient, local control was maintained for 2 years until the patient died of distant metastases. This is, to our knowledge, the first reported case of lung cryoablation in residual lungs of patients who have previously undergone pneumonectomies. Application of percutaneous cryoablation may represent a new treatment option for lung tumors in patients who have previously undergone pneumonectomies.

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