03:36 PM Abstract No. 37 Image-guided intrathecal lumbar catheter placement: safety and efficacy of an uncommon interventional radiology procedure

2019 ◽  
Vol 30 (3) ◽  
pp. S20
Author(s):  
A. Yule ◽  
M. Hong ◽  
K. Schramm ◽  
P. Rochon
Author(s):  
Jessica M. Ho ◽  
Michael D. Katz

Percutaneous drainage catheter placement is a frequently performed interventional radiology procedure. One of the common management complications of such catheters is obstruction or clogging of the catheter. Occluded drainage catheters are routinely exchanged over a guidewire under fluoroscopic guidance. At times, however, a guidewire cannot be passed through the catheter obstruction, and exchanging the catheter over a guidewire may become difficult or even impossible without losing access. Because salvaging an obstructed catheter, without risking loss of access, can be difficult, multiple techniques to preserve organ access have been developed. This chapter describes a technique whereby the creation of a new side hole in the catheter is used to re-establish wire access and facilitate catheter exchange. It is frequently useful for exchanging enteric tubes, urologic drainage catheters, biliary drainage catheters, and abscess drains.


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (Suppl 3) ◽  
pp. A422-A422
Author(s):  
Ravi Murthy ◽  
Rahul Sheth ◽  
Alda Tam ◽  
Sanjay Gupta ◽  
Vivek Subbiah ◽  
...  

BackgroundImage guided intra-tumor administration of investigational immunotherapeutic agents represents an expanding field of interest. We present a retrospective review of the safety, feasibility & technical nuances of real-time image guidance for injection & biopsy across a spectrum of extracranial solid malignancies utilizing the discipline of Interventional Radiology.MethodsPatients who were enrolled in image guided intratumoral immunotherapy injection (ITITI) clinical trials over a 6 year period (2013–19) at a single tertiary care cancer center were included in this analysis. Malignancy, location, imaging guidance utilized for ITITI & biopsy for injected (adscopal) & non-injected (abscopal) lesions were determined and categorized. Peri-procedural adverse events were noted.Results262 pts (146 female, 61 yrs median) participating in 29 immunotherapeutic clinical trials (TLR & STING agonists, gene therapy, anti CD-40, viral/bacterial/metabolic oncolytics) met study criteria. Malignancies included melanoma 88, sarcoma 32, colorectal 29, breast 23, lung 17, head & neck 15, ovarian 8, neuroendocrine 7, pancreatic adenocarcinoma 6, 3 each (cholangioCA, endometrial, bladder, GI tract), 2 each (RCC, thymicCA, lymphoma, merkel cell, prostate) & others 1 each (CUP, GIST, dermatofibrosarcoma, DSRT, neuroblastoma, thyroid). All 169 & 93 patients received the intended 1371 ITITI in parietal (abdominal/chest wall, extremity, neck, pelvis) or visceral (liver, lung, peritoneum, adrenal) locations respectively; 83 patients received lymph node injections within either location. Imaging guidance was US in 68% of the cohort (US 161, CT+US 19); CT was used in 30% (81) & MRI in 1 patient. Median diameter of the ITITI lesion was 32 mm (8–230 mm). Median volume of the ITITI therapeutic material/session was 2 ml (1–6.9 ml). Lesions were accessed using a coaxial technique. ITITI delivery needles used at operator preference & tailored to lesion characteristics were either a 21G/22G Chiba, 21G Profusion (Cook Medical), 22G Morrison (AprioMed), 25G hypodermic (BD) & 18G Quadrafuse (Rex Medical). 2840 core biopsies (>18G Tru-cut core, Mission, Bard Medical) were performed in 237 patients during 690 procedures; biopsy sessions were often concurrent & of the ITITI site. 137 patients also underwent biopsy of a non-ITITI site (89 parietal location). Dimensions of the non-ITITI lesion were median 10 mm (7–113 mm); US image guidance was used in 97 patients (72%) to obtain a total of 1257, >18G Tru-core samples. 1.3% of injections resulted in SAE (NCI CTC AE >3) and 0.5% of 4097 biopsies developed major complications (SIR Criteria); both categories were manageable.ConclusionsUtilizing real time image guidance, ITITI to the administration of a myriad of investigational immunotherapeutic agents with concomitant biopsy procedures to date are associated with a high technical success rate & favorable safety profile.AcknowledgementsJoshua Hein, Mara Castaneda, Jyotsna Pera, Yunfang Jiang,Shuang Liu, Holly Liu and Anna LuiTrial RegistrationN/AEthics ApprovalThe study was approved by Institution’s Ethics Board, approval number 2020-0536: A retrospective study to determine the safety, feasibility and technical challenges of real-time image guidance for intra-tumor injection and biopsy across multiple solid tumors.Consent2020-0536 Waiver of Informed ConsentReferenceSheth RA, Murthy R, Hong DS, et al. Assessment of image-guided intratumoral delivery of immunotherapeutics in patients with cancer. JAMA Netw Open 2020;3(7):e207911. doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2020.7911


2021 ◽  
Vol 38 (03) ◽  
pp. 373-376
Author(s):  
Ahsun Riaz ◽  
Riad Salem

AbstractWe are at an exciting cross-road in biliary interventions. While other services such as surgery and gastroenterology have learned to use imaging guidance to improve the safety and efficacy of their procedures, it is time for interventional radiologist to learn endoscopic interventions to achieve the same. The future of interventional radiologists in managing patients with biliary disease depends on (1) increasing comfort of our procedures, (2) publishing our data on biliary interventions, and (3) increasing collaboration with other services to manage biliary disease. We need to appropriately understand the limitations of interventional radiology to help guide the future directions of our specialty in this very interesting space.


2015 ◽  
Vol 26 (9) ◽  
pp. 1339-1346.e1 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yasir Andrabi ◽  
Thomas S. Saadeh ◽  
Raul N. Uppot ◽  
Ronald S. Arellano ◽  
Dushyant V. Sahani

Author(s):  
Benjamin J. McCafferty ◽  
Husamedin El Khudari ◽  
Aliaksei Salei ◽  
Andrew J. Gunn

AbstractVariceal hemorrhage is a morbid condition that frequently mandates the involvement of interventional radiology to achieve successful and sustained hemostasis. Primary image-guided therapies for variceal hemorrhage include a transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt and transvenous obliteration. Knowledge of variceal pathophysiology and anatomy, current techniques, and the evidence supporting therapeutic selection is paramount to successful patient outcomes. The purpose of this review is to provide the reader a framework of the available literature on image-guided management of bleeding varices to assist in clinical management.


2019 ◽  
Vol 89 (12) ◽  
pp. 1610-1614 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yasser Al‐Hakeem ◽  
Orit Raz ◽  
Zita Gacs ◽  
Fiona Maclean ◽  
Celi Varol

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document