Purpose
Primary sarcomas of the heart are rare tumors with a median survival of 8-12 months [1]. Multimodality treatment that includes complete resection effectively prolongs survival [1,2]. Patients with unresectable tumors often succumb to heart failure due to obstructive lesions of the heart. Pulmonary hypertension is an indicator of poor prognosis [3]. We describe a patient with unresectable right heart sarcoma successfully treated with endovascular brachytherapy for a right-heart and pulmonary artery (PA) sarcoma.
Case report
A 35-year-old man presented with a three-month history of progressive dyspnea and palpitations. Work-up revealed a mass in the right ventricle (RV), involving the tricuspid valve, partially obstructing the outflow tract, extending to the main and right pulmonary arteries, causing significant luminal stenosis (Figure 1). Right ventricle tumor volume by computed tomography (CT, Philips iCT256 [Philips, Surrey, UK], gaited, 0.6 mm slices, 120 kV, 600 mAs) was 16.6 ml. Main pulmonary artery (MPA) cross-sectional area was 3.15 cm2, and maximal wall thickness was 8.3 mm. Right PA cross-sectional area was 1.77 cm2 and maximal wall thickness was 8.0 mm (Figure 2). Pulmonary artery pressure assessed by 2D echocardiography (Philips EPIQ7, Philips, Surrey, UK) was supra-systemic. Endomyocardial biopsy confirmed the diagnosis of a high-grade intimal sarcoma.
After three cycles of doxorubicin and ifosfamide, the patient’s symptoms of right heart failure worsened. Imaging documented tumor progression. To minimize the effects of external beam irradiation on the heart and keep the option of a radical R0 resection viable, we elected to utilize endovascular brachytherapy.
Material and methods
This was a one-time treatment of high-dose-rate (HDR) brachytherapy. No endovascular devices, such as stents or seeds, were implanted. Given the novelty of the procedure, detailed informed consent was obtained. The initial procedure was performed in the cardiac catheterization laboratory. Through a transfemoral venous access, a soft guidewire was placed in the RV and the right PA. The patient was then transferred to the radiotherapy suite. A brachytherapy sleeve was inserted over the wire and anchored to a distal PA branch to prevent migration. A 14 cm, 6 F demonstration catheter was inserted through the sleeve for dosage calculation and a CT simulation was performed (Figure 3). The CT plan was transferred to the PLATO planning system (Elekta AB, Stockholm, Sweden) and a dose of 20 Gy was planned to the 0.7 cm isodose line. We chose the radial dimensions based on the CT simulation, the tumor thickness within the RV and PA, and the position of the catheter. The V100, V150 and V200 for the PA and RV were 51%, 34%, 23% and 28%, 16%, 10%, respectively (Figure 3). Since our primary goal was to maintain vessel patency, tumor volume conformality was suboptimal. The irradiation was delivered over a period of ten minutes using a 192Ir source (microSelectron, Elekta AB, Stockholm, Sweden). The delivery system was removed at the end of the procedure. We aimed to reduce the irradiation to the right heart itself, the tricuspid valve and the esophagus to a minimum (Figure 4).
Results
The patient had an uneventful course and was discharged home 24 hours after the procedure. Ten months after brachytherapy, repeat CT angiography demonstrated a 40% reduction in the RV tumor volume (Figure 1A,C), a 42% increase in MPA cross-sectional area, and a 55% reduction in its wall thickness (Figure 2A,B). Symptoms of heart failure completely resolved, parallel to the radiological response. The patient was reluctant to receive additional chemotherapy of any kind. The patient succumbed to a widespread metastatic spread 38 months after the initial diagnosis with slightly elevated pulmonary artery pressures and no side-effects related to the brachytherapy.
Discussion
We describe a case of a young patient presenting with obstructive right-heart sarcoma that did not respond to chemotherapy, and was deemed inoperable due to extensive involvement of the right ventricle and pulmonary arteries. The prognosis in this setting is exceedingly poor [1,4,5]. The remaining therapeutic options are limited, and include second- and third-line chemotherapy regimens and external beam irradiation. The patient declined chemotherapy due to the intense side-effects he had suffered.
In patients with primary sarcoma, the heart is usually more sensitive to irradiation than the tumor, therefore precluding normal-dose radiotherapy [5]. Advanced imaging including positron emission tomography, CT and magnetic resonance imaging that allow precise treatment planning make external beam irradiation more feasible and tolerable [6]. However, it is still reserved for patients who are not candidates for radical curative surgery.
We elected to utilize endovascular brachytherapy as a novel therapeutic approach, aiming to reduce tumor load, restore flow in the PA, alleviate symptoms of heart failure secondary to right ventricle pressure overload, and at the same time keep the option of radical surgery by avoiding high-dose external beam irradiation to the heart. We achieved a 40% reduction in RV tumor volume, a 42% increase in MPA cross-sectional area and complete resolution of heart failure symptoms. We achieved the therapeutic goal with essentially no side-effects since adjacent structures such as the right ventricular free wall, tricuspid valve and the esophagus received a substantially lower dose of irradiation than the primary tumor. The patient was reluctant to receive additional chemotherapy. Thus, despite the favorable response to brachytherapy, the extent of the tumor was such that a complete (R0) resection was not feasible.
Endoluminal brachytherapy is infrequently used for cancer treatment. Only a handful of reports describe the utility of intra-venous stent and 125I seed implantation in patients with cancer-associated portal vein or peripheral vein tumor occlusion [7,8].
To the best of our knowledge this is the first report of using endovascular brachytherapy for primary right-heart and PA sarcoma. The advantages of this novel therapeutic approach include a short, one-time treatment delivery in contrast to multiple treatment sessions, rapid tumor regression alleviating hemodynamically significant obstruction and avoiding implantation of a thrombogenic foreign body. Precise, localized targeting allows delivery of high-dose irradiation dose to the tumor, avoiding side-effects on adjacent heart structures, frequently observed after external beam irradiation to the constantly moving heart, and often precluding subsequent definitive surgery [5,6]. The main potential hazard of this approach is vascular perforation during the initial procedure or at the time of maximal treatment effect.
In conclusion, endovascular brachytherapy is a novel, safe and effective therapeutic modality for unresectable primary cardiac sarcomas, either for palliation of obstruction, or tumor mass reduction to allow complete resection.