Percutaneous ablation of bone tumors

F. Deschamps, G. Farouil, T. De Baere

    Research output: Contribution to journalShort surveypeer-review

    37 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Percutaneous ablation (radiofrequency or cryotherapy) of bone tumors is most often performed for palliative purposes. Many studies have shown that percutaneous ablation of a painful bone metastasis can significantly and sustainably reduce symptoms. It is therefore an alternative to radiotherapy and to long-term opiates. Percutaneous ablation can also be performed for curative purposes. In this situation, its efficacy has however only been studied to a very small extent (apart from radiofrequency ablation of osteoid osteomas in which the success rate is almost 100%). In our experience, the success rate after radiofrequency ablation of a bone metastasis is 75% if it is less than 3 cm in diameter and fall significantly over this (to 40%, P = 0.04). This treatment can therefore be justified in oligometastatic patients whose disease is progressing slowly. Its benefit on survival has however not been assessed in this selected population. Whether it is performed for palliative or curative reasons, percutaneous ablation should ideally be followed by an injection of cement if the metastasis being treated is lytic and located in a bone, which is subject to mechanical forces. The aim of consolidating cementoplasty is to counterbalance the additional risk of fracture due to destruction of the percutaneously ablated bone.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)659-663
    Number of pages5
    JournalDiagnostic and Interventional Imaging
    Volume95
    Issue number7-8
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2014

    Keywords

    • Cryotherapy
    • Percutaneous ablation
    • Radiofrequency
    • Tumor

    Cite this