European Conference on Interventional Oncology
ECIO countries

April 26 - 30 | Basel, CH

April 26-30 | Basel, CH

April 26-30 | Basel, CH

April 26-30 | Basel, CH

April 26-30 | Basel, CH

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ProgrammeSneak peeksWhat about thermal ablation in NSCLC?

What about thermal ablation in NSCLC?

Three things you will learn at my lecture

1. Targeted precision: Image-guided thermal ablation (IGTA) provides effective local control in NSCLC while preserving lung function, often exceeding expectations in high-risk patients.

2. Evidence unpacked: Long-term studies reveal 5-year overall survival rates ranging from 16% to 68%, with local control rates of 47-90%, though the absence of large RCTs calls for careful evaluation.

3. Salvage game-changer: Thermal ablation serves as a viable repeat intervention for recurrences, potentially avoiding more invasive procedures and influencing broader treatment strategies.

Dr. Robert Suh
Speaker bio | View the session
 

What about thermal ablation in NSCLC?

In the ongoing battle against non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), lobectomy remains the established standard for early-stage disease. However, for an increasing number of high-risk patients—those with comorbidities, compromised pulmonary function, or advanced age—image-guided thermal ablation (IGTA) emerges as a compelling alternative. This modality, refined over more than two decades, challenges traditional approaches with its precision, cost-effectiveness, and ability to spare lung tissue. At ECIO 2026, we will explore IGTA’s role in NSCLC management, drawing on robust evidence to highlight its potential and limitations.

The value of IGTA is evident, particularly in stage I NSCLC, where up to 30% of patients may be unfit for lobectomy [2]. Introduced in 2001 for pulmonary tumors, IGTA employs percutaneous [5], CT-guided delivery of extreme temperatures: heat via radiofrequency ablation (RFA, up to 100°C) or microwave ablation (MWA, achieving larger zones at higher temperatures), or freezing through cryoablation (below -40°C). This induces cellular necrosis in the tumor and a surrounding margin, with minimal disruption to adjacent healthy parenchyma. Unlike surgical resection, IGTA avoids general anesthesia, enables outpatient procedures in many cases, and preserves pulmonary function—studies consistently report no significant decline in FEV1 or DLCO post-treatment [1].

In high-risk stage I NSCLC, IGTA competes with sublobar resection and stereotactic ablative radiotherapy (SABR). Systematic reviews by the American Association for Thoracic Surgery (AATS) synthesize data from thousands of patients: RFA yields local control rates of 47-90%, with optimal results in tumors under 3 cm (up to 90% control) [1]. MWA extends ablation volumes, reporting 5-year overall survival (OS) of 16-33% in select series, while cryoablation offers advantages in peripheral lesions with reduced hemorrhage risk [1]. Across modalities, pooled 5-year outcomes include OS of 16-68% (e.g., 16% in MWA series, up to 68% in cryoablation cohorts), progression-free survival of 30-50%, and local recurrence-free survival of 70-85% [5]—figures comparable to SABR in retrospective analyses from registries like the National Cancer Database (NCDB) and Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER), where no OS differences appear in propensity-matched cohorts [3, 5].

Critically, however, IGTA remains underutilized, with adoption varying by region—more prevalent in Asia than in North America, where SABR predominates, while in Europe, CIRSE endorses IGTA (RFA, MWA, cryoablation) for lung tumors via practice standards, though SABR prevails in most radiotherapy centers per ESTRO guidelines [3]. This disparity stems from a lack of large randomized controlled trials (RCTs) comparing IGTA directly to SABR or sublobar resection. Retrospective data indicate sublobar surgery may achieve superior primary tumor control (90% vs. 80% for IGTA), but often at the expense of higher morbidity, extended recovery, and lung volume loss [3]. IGTA’s re-treatability stands out: in cases of post-SABR recurrence (10-20%), it offers 70-80% control in oligometastatic or recurrent scenarios, even following prior radiation or surgery [5].

IGTA also holds promise in advanced NSCLC, particularly oligometastatic disease, where integration with systemic therapies like immunotherapy may enhance outcomes. Ablation’s release of tumor antigens could potentiate PD-1 inhibitors, with preliminary evidence of abscopal effects shrinking distant metastases [5]. For patients with interstitial lung disease (ILD), where SABR risks severe pneumonitis, IGTA demonstrates lower complication rates [3].

Challenges include higher local failure in tumors exceeding 3 cm or near central structures, where vascular heat sink reduces efficacy to 50% [1]. Common complications like pneumothorax (20-50%) are typically manageable, with severe events such as hemorrhage or fistula occurring in under 5% [1]. Optimal application requires biopsy-confirmed NSCLC, lesions under 5 cm, and multidisciplinary assessment [4].

Looking ahead, advancements in AI-driven planning, robotic assistance, and hybrid regimens promise greater accuracy. Thermal ablation is not merely an adjunct but a transformative option in NSCLC care, balancing oncologic efficacy with quality of life. Join us at ECIO 2026 to examine the data and consider its integration into practice—innovation in oncology demands such scrutiny.

Robert Suh

University of Los Angeles, Los Angeles, US

Robert Suh, M.D. is a Clinical Professor in the Department of Radiological Sciences at the Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center and the UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine since 1998. Currently, Dr. Suh serves as the Director of Thoracic Interventional Services and as the first Vice Chair of Radiology Education at UCLA Medical Center since 2016. Dr. Suh has been the Program Director of the Diagnostic Radiology Residency since 2002. An internationally recognized leader in lung thermal ablation, Dr. Suh has focused his research efforts primarily on image-guided thermal ablation, high-dose rate brachytherapy, tissue retrieval, image-guided intratumoral drug delivery, and gene profiling technologies in the treatment of pulmonary malignancies. Over his career, Dr. Suh has moderated and given over 600 presentations at local, regional, national, and international meetings and conferences.

 

References:

  1. Lanuti M, Suh RD, Criner GJ, et al. Systematic Review of Image-Guided Thermal Ablation for Treatment of High-Risk Patients with Stage I Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer. Semin Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 2024; doi:10.1053/j.semtcvs.2024.11.001
  2. Pennathur A, Lanuti M, Merritt RE, et al. Systematic Review of the Comparative Studies of Image-Guided Thermal Ablation, Stereotactic Radiosurgery, and Sublobar Resection for Treatment of High-Risk Patients with Stage I Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer. Semin Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 2024a; doi:10.1053/j.semtcvs.2024.11.003
  3. Pennathur A, Lanuti M, Merritt RE, et al. Treatment of High-Risk Patients with Stage I Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer. Semin Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 2024b; doi:10.1053/j.semtcvs.2024.10.002
  4. Pennathur A, Lanuti M, Merritt RE, et al. Treatment Selection for the High-Risk Patient with Stage I Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer: Sublobar Resection, Stereotactic Ablative Radiotherapy or Image-Guided Thermal Ablation? Semin Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 2024c; doi:10.1053/j.semtcvs.2024.10.004
  5. Velez MA, Lisberg A, Suh RD. Primary Lung Cancer. In: Interventional Oncology: Principles and Practice of Oncologic Interventions. Springer; 2020:69-93.