Concepedia

Abstract

The traditional approach to treatment of malignant pericardial effusion has been surgical, with establishment of a pericardial window. Conservative management with local instillation of chemotherapeutic agents and/or focal radiotherapy has received less attention, particularly when solid tumors have been causative. This series of 5 patients with antemortem diagnoses of malignant pericardial disease had predominant pericardial effusion rather than tumor encasement as the basis for tamponade. These 5 patients received initial therapy with local instillation of a chemotherapeutic agent ± radiotherapy. Four of the 5 made complete responses with total disappearance of cardiac symptoms and signs. Two of the responders are dead, 4 and 12 months, respectively, after initial treatment, neither showing significant pericardial fluid at postmortem examination. Two patients are alive and asymptomatic, 40 months and 8 months, respectively, after initial therapy. A literature review of treatment of malignant pericardial effusions discloses longer symptom-free intervals in patients treated by conservative measures compared to surgical programs utilizing pericardial window accompanied by any combination of other treatment modalities.

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