Superior Vena Cava Obstruction

Post on 25-Dec-2015

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description

A visual discussion of superior vena cava obstruction and superior vena cava syndrome. To be accompanied by "SVCO Lecture Notes". Discusses role of radiation, stents, and steroids (corticosteroids).

Transcript of Superior Vena Cava Obstruction

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Superior vena cava obstruction

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Case 1

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Clinical presentation

4Wilson et al. Superior Vena Cava Syndrome with Malignant Causes. N Engl J Med 2007;356:1862-9.

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Differential diagnosis

7Wilson et al. Superior Vena Cava Syndrome with Malignant Causes. N Engl J Med 2007;356:1862-9.

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Pathophysiology

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Wilson et al. Superior Vena Cava Syndrome with Malignant Causes. N Engl J Med 2007;356:1862-9.

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Findings on imaging

12Wilson et al. Superior Vena Cava Syndrome with Malignant Causes. N Engl J Med 2007;356:1862-9.

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Definitive diagnosis

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Complications of definitive diagnosis

18Dosios et al. Chest 2005; 128:1551–1556

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Management

• Is it an emergency?• Supportive care

• Definitive treamtent– Chemotherapy– Radiotherapy– Stent– Surgery

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Is it an emergency?

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Supportive care

• Elevate patient’s head• Steroids?• Loop diuretics?• Evidence???

• Special cases:– IV placement– Thrombosis

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Definitive therapy• Chemotherapy– NHL– SCLC– Germ cell tumours

• Radiotherapy

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Surgery

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Evidence

• Clinical Oncology (2002)– SCLC: relief?– NSCLC: relief?– Stent: relief?– Rapidity of response?– Relapse rates?

26Rowell et al. Steroids, radiotherapy, chemotherapy and stents for superior vena caval obstruction in carcinoma of the bronchus: a systematic review. Clinical Oncology 2002; 14:338-351.

27Rowell et al. Steroids, radiotherapy, chemotherapy and stents for superior vena caval obstruction in carcinoma of the bronchus: a systematic review. Clinical Oncology 2002; 14:338-351.

28Rowell et al. Steroids, radiotherapy, chemotherapy and stents for superior vena caval obstruction in carcinoma of the bronchus: a systematic review. Clinical Oncology 2002; 14:338-351.

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Outcome Chemotherapy Radiotherapy Stent

Relief of symptoms (SCLC)

76.9% 70.4% (prior CT)94.4% (no CT)

95% (all)

Relief of symptoms (NSCLC)

59% 63%

Rapidity of response

7-21 days 24-72 hrs

Relapse rates 16.7% (SCLC)18.5% (NSCLC)

11% (all)

Rowell et al. Steroids, radiotherapy, chemotherapy and stents for superior vena caval obstruction in carcinoma of the bronchus: a systematic review. Clinical Oncology 2002; 14:338-351.

Caveats:• Trials included in systematic review were of moderate

quality (44 non-randomized, 2 RCTs)• Small numbers of patients

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Prognosis

SVCO itself

Malignancy-relatedIs SVCO an independent prognostic factor for survival?

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Case 2

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SVCO

In distressStridor, laryngeal

edema, cerebral edema

Urgent steroids, stent, radiotherapy

Symptomatic

StentProceed to "No distress"

No distress

Obtain pathologic diagnosis

Lymphoma

Chemotherapy, radiotherapy, ±steroids

SCLC

Chemotherapy, radiotherapy

NSCLC

Radiotherapy, chemotherapy

Thymoma

Chemotherapy, surgery, then radiotherapy

Tailored treatment depending on diagnosis

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