Abstract Introduction Pulsed Electric Field (PEF) Ablation has been used as an adjunct therapy for cancer. Robotic-Assisted Bronchoscopy (RAB) enables precise access to pulmonary lesions for biopsy and ablative therapy. However, anatomic obstructions within the airway may prohibit access to peripheral targets. We report a case in which robotic bronchoscopy navigation for the delivery of PEF was not initially possible due to a new anatomic airway obstruction secondary to radiation fibrosis. We were able to utilize therapeutic bronchoscopy to re-cannulate the airway and deliver the PEF via the robotic bronchoscope. Case Report A 68-year-old man with a history of left lung adenocarcinoma was treated with surgery, chemoradiation and durvalumab consolidation therapy. Surveillance imaging 4 years later revealed consolidation in the right upper mediastinum. A bronchoscopy brush biopsy confirmed adenocarcinoma and received systemic chemotherapy. Later a PET-CT showed a non FDG avid enlarged right paratracheal lesion. Follow-up CT revealed complete obstruction of the right middle lobar bronchus with associated middle lobe collapse likely secondary to radiation. Endobronchial ultrasound-guided transbronchial needle aspiration (EBUS-TBNA) of the right paratracheal lesion confirmed malignancy on onsite cytopathology. Subsequently, we performed two PEF ablations targeting the involved lesion. Repeat PET-CT demonstrated two hypermetabolic foci in the right hilum and right supraclavicular region. However, the previously PEF treated paratracheal lesion was not PET avid. We used a RAB to navigate into the right upper lobe and identified the anterior segment to be obstructed in addition to the previously noted right middle lobe. Due to this, the robotic bronchoscope couldn’t be advanced to the right hilar PET avid lesion. Utilizing guidewires, balloon dilatation and fluoroscopy we re-cannulated the obstructed right upper lobe segment and subsequently advance the robotic bronchoscope to the target in the right upper lobe. Under cone-beam guidance, multiple biopsies were obtained and confirmed as malignant. Following this, the INUMI PEF needle was deployed. We delivered two PEF activations to the right hilar PET-avid lesion. Subsequent systemic staging using linear EBUS identified station 4R lymph node involvement, positive for malignancy on rapid onsite cytopathologic evaluation. The 4R lymph node was superior to the previously treated paratracheal lesion. We then deployed the INUMI PEF needle, and PEF ablation was performed successfully. Discussion To our knowledge, this is the first reported instance of combining robotic and therapeutic bronchoscopy to overcome airway obstruction to facilitate the distal treatment of peripheral target with PEF. This abstract is funded by: None
Husta et al. (Fri,) studied this question.