Therapeutic bronchoscopy in malignant central airway obstruction: is technical success always clinically relevant?
Editorial Commentary

Therapeutic bronchoscopy in malignant central airway obstruction: is technical success always clinically relevant?

Hervé Dutau1, Nicolas Guibert2

1Thoracic Oncology, Pleural Diseases and Interventional Pulmonology Department, North University Hospital, Marseille, France; 2Interventional Pulmonology Unit, Pulmonology Department, Hôpital Larrey, Toulouse, France

Correspondence to: Hervé Dutau. Thoracic Oncology, Pleural Diseases and Interventional Pulmonology Department, North University Hospital, Marseille, France. Email: hdutau@ap-hm.fr.

Submitted Jan 12, 2022. Accepted for publication Feb 16, 2022.

doi: 10.21037/jtd-22-52


Therapeutic bronchoscopy (TB), and more largely interventional pulmonology, is a medical discipline mainly based on empirical knowledge coming from experts’ opinions, retrospective studies, registries and very few prospective and even less randomized studies. In fact, any new prospective study, even though with important limitations, that adds scientific evidence is welcome. The conclusions of the study by Freitas et al. (1) may sound redundant with what we think to know from our experience and daily practice in malignant central airway obstruction (MCAO). Indeed, naïve patients from oncologic treatment have longer survival rates, purely endoluminal lesions are easier to treat endoscopically, and the technical success is higher when distal airway and lung parenchyma are visible on computed tomography (CT) scans before the procedure. However, this paper has the merit to assess it in a prospective way. The empirical and theoretical factors allowing for a technical success of TB in patients suffering from MCAO are rather well defined: the obstruction has to be symptomatic (i.e., dyspnea) because the procedure is a symptomatic one, the obstruction has to be located in the main airway (trachea, main stem bronchi, bronchus intermedius essentially) and has to be limited distally in length so that, after reopening, safe airway and functional parenchyma can be found and a stent can eventually cover all the malignant area. In addition, pulmonary arteries have to be functional (in order to prevent a pulmonary dead space) and patients need a performance status sufficient enough to enjoy the clinical benefit. This prerequisite for the technical success of TB, even though mainly empirical, is already largely applied, in the selection of patients, given the high percentage of success reported in about 85–90% by the operators in the literature (2-9).

However, there is still a significant difference in terms of technical and clinical success of the procedure. Ost et al., in the American registry, showed that technical success of TB was 93% while the symptoms and the quality of life (QOL) had improved in 48% and 42% respectively (3).

One of the main limitations of the study by Freitas et al., is that there is no data regarding symptoms and QOL. Again, TB is a symptomatic procedure and without significant symptoms, the procedure should not be undergone. The main symptom is dyspnea. In quite a recent randomized and prospective study (10), all patients were technical successes from the procedure (airway lumen >50% after debulking, a pathologic area that could be entirely covered by a stent if needed, and safe bronchi distal to the obstruction). The mean Borg’ scale score of the patients was 7, which represents a severe dyspnea. Realistically, it seems that the higher the dyspnea is, the better the clinical benefit will be.

With a similar radiological pattern of total lung atelectasis, two clinical patterns can be found. In the first one, a severe dyspnea generally represents the sudden obstruction of a main stem bronchus leading to previously functional lung parenchyma. In the second pattern, a progressive dyspnea, or a dyspnea only on exertion, will more likely be secondary to a malignancy evolving from the periphery of the lung to the central airway. Complete atelectasis of a lung can produce significant intrapulmonary shunt. In case of failure of the hypoxic vasoconstriction (Euler-Liljestrand reflex), severe hypoxemia can be observed that do not respond to supplemental oxygen. Even a partial re-opening of these lungs can tremendously improve dyspnea.

The extreme clinical situation is represented by patients requiring invasive or non-invasive mechanical ventilation for respiratory distress. These patients represent those who will probably benefit the most from TB and in the vast majority are weaned from mechanical ventilation thanks to TB (3,11,12).

In the case of lobar obstruction, TB is recommended in order to control bleeding or draining a post-obstructive pneumonia, because ventilation does not significantly improve these cases (13).

The role of invasion, or not, of the pulmonary arteries is crucial in the evaluation of the potential clinical success of TB. In the case of documented pulmonary artery thrombosis, debulking is associated with a risk of an enhanced dead space effect (14).

Patient characteristics are crucial in considering bronchoscopic management, with the aim to avoid invasive techniques in patients who will not benefit from them and select those who will gain benefits. In a retrospective study, prognostic factors (histology, TNM stage, ASA score and previous treatment) allow the determination of patient subgroups that appear to benefit the most from the treatment. The median life expectancy of these patients was generally quite limited to 4.7 months, with great variability (13 months for previously untreated squamous cell carcinomas to less than 1 month for ASA 4 adenocarcinomas) (7).

The procedure-related mortality rate, which is none in Freitas study (1), is generally low with TB, however, reaching 1.9% mainly for patients with metastatic disease whose general status is extremely altered (7). Metastatic patients (relative risk 1.83) with a poor general status (anaesthetic score ASA 4, relative risk 2.57) seem to be poor candidates. Despite having chemosensitive tumours, their poor prognosis (relative risk 1.7 for large cell carcinoma and 1.55 for small cell carcinoma) leads to this candidate inadequacy (7).

Naïve patients from any oncologic treatment seem to have a better survival, although it is not always the case. Guibert et al. (7) found that survival in previously treated patients to be significantly better when compared with that of untreated patients (relative risk 0.53), even after taking into account the adjustment of other prognostic factors. This supports the idea that TB should not be considered as a last chance procedure after having exhausted all other treatments. TB must be included in multimodal management and combined with specific treatments to improve their tolerability (e.g., post-obstructive pneumonia drainage before chemotherapy and potential aplasia, relieving atelectasis in order to consider radiotherapy).

All these potential prognostic factors must be validated prospectively. This will enable a more precise evaluation of the effectiveness of TB in terms of survival and quality of life (QOL). It will also allow the identification of patient subgroups that will benefit from a better QOL and a longer survival. A prospective study on 947 patients evaluated QOL after TB of MCAO (3). Health-related QOL (SF-6D) was improved in 76 (42%) out of 183 patients measured. In the SPOC trial a dramatic improvement of QOL [Quality of Life 30 Lung Cancer 13 (QLC 30 LC-13)] was observed in both arms, with a more sustained effect in the stent arm (10). So far, only two small studies have evaluated the effectiveness of a multimodal TB on QOL. Amjadi et al. (15) showed, in 20 patients, an improvement of the dyspnea score, but not in the overall QOL score measured by the EORTC (European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer) score. The second study, involving 37 patients, failed to find a significant improvement in the overall score (EORTC LC13) either (16).

In conclusion, thanks to Freitas et al. (1), some questions regarding predictors of technical success of TB in MCAO have now found answers in a prospective way, but many other prospective studies need to be performed to answer all the remaining questions related to the clinical success, improvement in QOL, the timing of TB in the multimodal oncologic management, and to the identification of the characteristics of the gold responding patients.


Acknowledgments

We thank Mrs. Aniko Fleming for the English edition.

Funding: None.


Footnote

Provenance and Peer Review: This article was commissioned by the editorial office, Journal of Thoracic Disease. The article has undergone external peer review.

Peer Review File: Available at https://jtd.amegroups.com/article/view/10.21037/jtd-22-52/prf

Conflicts of Interest: Both authors have completed the ICMJE uniform disclosure form (available at https://jtd.amegroups.com/article/view/10.21037/jtd-22-52/coif). HD reports that he is a consultant for Novatech SA. The other author has no conflicts of interest to declare.

Ethical Statement: The authors are accountable for all aspects of the work in ensuring that questions related to the accuracy or integrity of any part of the work are appropriately investigated and resolved.

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Cite this article as: Dutau H, Guibert N. Therapeutic bronchoscopy in malignant central airway obstruction: is technical success always clinically relevant? J Thorac Dis 2022;14(3):794-796. doi: 10.21037/jtd-22-52

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