Br Med J: first published as 10.1136/bmj.4.5946.679 on 21 December 1974. Downloaded from http://www.bmj.com/ on 6 November 2021 at UK NHS and HE Athens Access.
Protected by copyright.
BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL                21 DECEMBER 1974                                                                         679
                                                          PAPERS AND ORIGINALS
Clinical Effects of Whole-body Hyperthermia in Advanced
Malignancy
R. T. PETTIGREW, JEAN M. GALT, C. M. LUDGATE, A. N. SMITH
British   Medical_Journal,   1974, 4, 679-682                     molten wax at 50°C to prevent evaporation of sweat and insulate
                                                                  the body. The overall effect is to raise the body temperature
                                                                  by 3 to 6° an hour depending on body weight. Previous work
Summary                                                           has shown that the method is safe for treatment periods up to
Fifty-one patients in the terminal stages of cancer have          eight hours provided that the temperature does not exceed
been treated with whole-body hyperthermia either alone            41-8°C and so long as there is adequate replacement of the
(38 cases) or in combination with chemotherapy (13                water and salt lost in the sweat (Pettigrew et al., 1974).
cases). Altogether 227 treatment sessions were held                  Thirty-eight patients have been treated with hyperthermia
averaging four hours each. The most sensitive tumours             alone in 188 treatment sessions and a further 13 with hyper-
were those of the gastrointestinal tract and sarcomas.            thermia in combination with cytotoxic drugs. In the first group
Breast and genitourinary tumours did not respond, and             the average length of each treatment above 41°C was four hours,
lung tumours and melanomas were only partially                    and treatments were given at weekly intervals. In the second
responsive. Major complications were remarkably few.              group treatment was given in three sessions each separated by
                                                                  three days. The first lasted 90 minutes and the other two
                                                                  four hours. Cytotoxic drugs were given by intravenous bolus
Introduction                                                      injection during the last treatment. Patients with malignant
                                                                  melanoma were given Melphalan 1 mg/kg; the others were
Temperatures in the range of 41 to 42'C have been shown to be     given cyclophosphamide 200 mg during the period of tempera-
lethal to tumour cells but not damaging to normal cells           ture rise and fluorouracil 15 mg/kg and vincristine 1 mg at a
(Cavaliere et al., 1967; Vermel and Kuznetsova, 1970;             temperature of 41°C.
Obergaard and Overgaard, 1972). Hyperthermia has been                The response to treatment was judged favourable if there was
applied to human tumours in vivo by isolated limb perfusion,      weight gain or pain relief plus either regression in tumour size
either alone or in combination with cytotoxic drugs (Cavaliere    on direct measurement or pathological evidence of necrosis in
et al., 1967; Stehlin, 1969), by whole-body hyperthermia          serial biopsy specimens or radiological evidence of regression.
(Warren, 1935; Henderson and Pettigrew, 1971), and by local       Further evidence of heat-induced tumour necrosis was obtained
irrigation (Hall et al., 1974). This paper records the clinical   at necropsy in five of the six patients who died soon after hyper-
responses of a series of patients to whole-body hyperthermia      thermia.
either alone (38 patients) or in combination with cytotoxic          Nineteen patients were excluded from the series. Fourteen
therapy (13 patients). All the patients were in the terminal      were treated in the developmental stages of the method when
stages of their disease and unsuited to further treatment by      temperatures above 40°C were not routinely used. These
conventional methods.                                             patients did not respond, and it is now accepted that temperatures
                                                                  in excess of 41°C are needed (Giovanella et al., 1970). A further
                                                                  five patients with no obviously measurable tumours were
Method                                                            treated for symptomatic relief of pain only.
The method used was that described previously (Pettigrew
et al., 1974), in which the narcotized patient is covered with
                                                                  Results
Western General Hospital, Edinburgh, EH4 2XU                      HYPERTHERMIA ALONE
R. T. PETTIGREW, M.B., F.F.A. R.C.S., Consultant Anaesthetist
C. M. LUDGATE, M.B., F.R.C.S., Surgical Registrar                 Though the numbers were small tumours of gastrointestinal
University of Edinburgh                                           origin and sarcomas appeared to respond more than genito-
A. N. SMITH, M.D., F.R.C.S., Reader in Clinical Surgery           urinary or breast neoplasms; lung tumours and malignant
JEAN M. GALT, B.Sc., Research Associate
                                                                  melanomas showed an intermediate response (table I).
                                                                                                                                                               Br Med J: first published as 10.1136/bmj.4.5946.679 on 21 December 1974. Downloaded from http://www.bmj.com/ on 6 November 2021 at UK NHS and HE Athens Access. Protected by copyright.
680                                                                                                 BIgTISH,   MEDICAL JOURNAL        21 DECEMBER 1974
FIG.  1-Photomicrographs of liposarcoma. A and C, pences of                       operation scr. A fourth had a hindquarter asrutation for osteo-
tumour after rection.  (Haematoxylin and eosin. A x 110. C x 2     B a
                                                                                  gnic wroma; two mmonths after the end of an 18-month course
D, appearances of recurrent tumour four months later after treent with
h perthermia showing total necrosis to right side and degenerate cells at         of treatmens ti tumour reaurred in a heat-resistant form. A fih
left margin. (Haemitoxylin and eosin. B x 110. D x 270).                          patient, with an alvanoed liposarcome, died 24 hours after treat-
                                                                                  ment. Necropsy showed recenrt massive necrosis throughout the
                                                                                  turwur (fig. 1). Two had sujective improvement with pain relief,
Case Reports                                                                      and a child with rhabdomyosaaro showed no response.
                                                                                    Carcisoma of Stomach.-.Three cases. Two anorexic patients
Sarcoma.-Eight cases. In one paient a lung deposit disappeared,                   who had been in great pain gained weight and were able to lead
a second showed healing of pathological fractures, and a third                    a relatively normal life. The thid had extensive mediastinal and
showed complete regression of a fibrosaroma recurrent in the                      lung metastases       and died 48 hours after treatment. At necropsy
TABLE I-Results of       Treatmet wth Hyperthermia Alon
                                                    Preiu Treatment
    Tumour Type
                          No. ofPatientsP Surgery
                             Treated                Radiotherapy   Chemotherapy
                                                                                   Objective
                                                                                  Responses
                                                                                               Subjective
                                                                                               Response
                                                                                                                No
                                                                                                              Response
                                                                                                                                Survival from St
                                                                                                                            of Thermotherapy (Weeks)
Sarcoma ..      ..              8            6            4            2             3+1*           6            1              84, 52, 20, 8, 4, 2, 1, 0-14
Gastric Cinoms3                              3            0            1             2+1*           2            0              16,16,0-28
Carcinoma colon ..              4            4            0            1               2            2            2              20,8,4,0-71
Melanoma.....   ..              7            7            2            2               3            4            3              12, 12, 8, 8, 4, 4, 3
Carnoma lung ..                 3            0            3            0               2            3            0              24,20,4
Carcinoma brent..               2            2            2            1               0            1            1              12,12
Ovarian c inoma,                4            4            2            3               0            0            4              24, 16, 8, 4
  teratoma testes
Neuroblastoma,                  3            3            3            3             1 +2*          1            0              24,0-85,0-28
  nephroblastoma
Miscelaneous        ..          4            2            4            4                1           1            2              32,24,12,057
* Necropsy evidence of recent tumour necrosis.
                                                                                                                                                          Br Med J: first published as 10.1136/bmj.4.5946.679 on 21 December 1974. Downloaded from http://www.bmj.com/ on 6 November 2021 at UK NHS and HE Athens Access. Protected by copyright.
BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL                21 DECEMBER 1974                                                                                           681
                                                                                  In    one                                     was regression of the
                                                                                                patient with adenocarcinoma there
                                                                                  primnary lung          (confirmed at necropsy) (fig. 2) though the
                                                                                                           tumour
                                                                                  seconday deposits remained active. The second patient, with a
                                                                                  squamous carcinoma, showed regression of a secondary deposit
                                                                                  in the lumbar spine, and the third had relief from pain but showed
                                                                                  no tumour         regression.
                                                                                     Breast Canaer.-Two patients with scirrhous carcinomas were
                                                                                  treated, one obtaining pain relief alone.
                                                                                     Ovarian and Testicular Tumours.-Two testicular teratomas and
                                                                                  two ovarian papillary tumours showed no response to treatment.
                                                                                     Neuroblastoma and Nephroblastoma.-Two cildren with
                                                                                  neuroblastomas were treated. One showed a good initial response,
                                                                                  with healing of ulcerated skin over the tumour in his jaw. The
                                                                                  second showed initial improvement till he developed respiratory
                                                                                  difficulties and died two days after treatment. Necropsy showed
                                                                                  multiple hae.morrhagic areas of necrosis in the tumour. One child
                                                                                  with a nephroblastoma showed initial improvement but also died
                                                                                  from a respiratory arrest. At necropsy there was gross necrosis of
                                                                                  the tumour.
                                                                                     Miscellaneous Tumours.-One case of mycosis fungoides showed
                                                                                  initial healing and there was pain relief alone in a case of adeno-
                                                                                  carcinoma of the nasopharynx. One case each of chronic myeloid
                                                                                  leikaemia and transitional oell carcinoma of the bladder showed
                                                                                  no response.
                                                                                  HYPERTHERMIA IN COMBINATION WITH CYTOTOXIC THERAPY
                                                                                  The results in the 13 patients givencytotoxic drugs duringhyper-
                                                                                  thermia are shown in table II.
                                                                                  Case Reports
                                                                                     Gastrointestinal Tumours.-Six cases. One patient ha'd an adeno-
                                                                                  carcinoma of the colon with large hepatic metastases enlarging the
                                                                                  liver -to 12 cm below the costal margin. After treatment the liver
                                                                                  mass regressed to a lump 5 by 6 cm and the patient was alive
                                                                                  and well at six months. The second patient, with a cholangio
                                                                                  carcinoma of the liver, showed regression of hepatomegaly with
                                                                                  complete clearance of jaundice (initial bilirubin 7-2 mg/ 100 ml)
                                                                                  and resolution of gress ascites. The third patient had an un-
                                                                                  differentiated carcinoma and was admitted to hospital as an
                                                                                  emergency case with large-bowel obstruction. Th-ere was a mass
                                                                                  20 cm in diameter in his left iliac fossa and he had renal failure
                                                                                  due to ureteric involvement. After treatment he had complete
                                                                                  regression of the mass with a return of normal renal and bowel
                                                                                  function. A fourth patient had some regression of hepatomegaly
                                                                                  and the fifth showed necrosis on serial biopsy. There was sympto-
                                                                                  matic improvement in one patient with adenocarcinoma of the
                                                                                  gall bladder.
                                                                                     Malignant Melanoma.-Three metastatic cases. Two patients
                                                                                  showed regression of involved axillary nodes and the third showed
FIG. 2-Chest x-ray pictures from patient with bronchogenic carcinoma. A,
                                                                                  regression of hepatomegaly though her secondary nodules did not
appearances before treatment with hyperthermia. B, appearances six weeks          change        in size.
later after six treatment sessions.                                                 Breast Canoer.-Three cases. These patients had cancer en
                                                                                  cuirasse and were in severe pain. In the first two there was relief
                                                                                  of pain with discontinuance of opiates and regrowth of skin over
there was extensive necrosis of the tumour causing compression                    the tumours. One of these patients died within 12 hours of a
of the bronchus.                                                                  further treatment given for recurrence three months later. There
   Carcinoma of Colon.-Four cases. One patient had almost com-                    a,ppeared to be no pathological evidence of tumour necrosis and
plete regression of massive h-epatomegaly; a second had regression                death was attributed to disseminated intravascular coagulation.
of skin noduiles on the lower abdomen. The other two cases                        The third patient died 48 hours after treatment with disseminated
showed no response.                                                               intravascular coagulation. In this case necropsy showed evidence
   Malignant Meanoma.-Seven cases. In three cases there was                       of recent cell death in the tunmour metastases, which involved liver,
good initial regression of secondary deposits and pain relief. One                adrenal, both kidneys, skull, uterus, pancreas, vertebrae, and dura.
patienrt had pain relief alone and three showed no response.                         Miscellaneous.-One case of osteoblastoma was treated. Though
   Carcinoma of Lung.-Three cases of bronchogenic carcinoma.                      the patient had pain relief there was no regression of the tumour.
TABLE il-Results of Treatment with Hyperthermia in Combination with Chemotherapy
                        No. of Patients              Previous Treatment           Objective          Subjective    No    Survival from Start
    Tumour Type             Treated                                               Response           Response   Response  of Thermotherapy (Weeks)
    _________                             ~Surgery    Radiotherapy Chemotherapy                         |-___ ____________________
Gastrointestinal               6             4            1              1              5                5          0         32, 20, 20, 16, 12, 8
  tumours
Carcinoma breast..             3             3           3               2             2+1*                 2       0           20, 12, 0-28
Melanoma ..      ..            3             3           0               0                  3               1       0           52, 44, 24
Osteoblastoma I..              1                         0               0              0                   1       0           12
e   Iecropsy evidence of recent tumour necrosis.
                                                                                                                                                      Br Med J: first published as 10.1136/bmj.4.5946.679 on 21 December 1974. Downloaded from http://www.bmj.com/ on 6 November 2021 at UK NHS and HE Athens Access. Protected by copyright.
682                                                                                    BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL             21 DECEMBER 1974
Complications                                                        treatment jaundice (Pettigrew et al., 1974). This did not occur
                                                                     after treatment at 41-80C, which was therefore taken as the
Complications may arise from the method, from the physio-            maximum permissible therapeutic temperature. There are
logical response to high temperatures, or from the toxic effects     indications that a treatment period in excess of 20 hours would
of tumour breakdown. When one considers that these patients          be needed at 41 80C to produce total tumour necrosis (Johnson,
were maintained in an unconscious state at temperatures of           1940). This treatment period may become possible with a
over 41°C for a total of about 1,000 hours complications of a        greater understanding of the physiological processes which occur
major character were remarkably few. The second patient treated,     at 41-8°C. Several workers have claimed that a synergism exists
in 1966, before the present controlled method was evolved,           between hyperthermia and certain cytotoxic drugs (Stehlin,
developed ventricular fibrillation. This was due to her tempera-     1969; Giovanella et al., 1970). By combining the two treatments
ture reaching 43°C as a result of thermometer failure and was        it may be possible to produce total tumour necrosis in a shorter
the only fatality directly attributable to induced hyperthermia.     time. The rationale behind this, however, has recently been
   Half of the patients developed a circumoral herpes simplex        questioned (Palzer and Heidelberger, 1973 a). Though the
during the first session but not on subsequent treatments. Sore      numbers in this series were small it appeared that there was an
throats, pressure sores due to prolonged immobilization during       enhanced effect when hyperthermia and chemotherapy were
treatments, and superficial burns in oedematous, hypoprotein-        combined.
aemic patients occurred.                                                With any treatment regimen aiming at total tumour necrosis
   Four adult patients died within 48 hours of hyperthermia;         in one session the possibility of toxic products causing dele-
their deaths were associated with evidence of disseminated           terious effects such as diffuse intravascular coagulation cannot
intravascular coagulation. In three necropsy showed recent           be ignored (Leavy et al., 1970; Peck and Reiquam, 1973). Yet
tumour necrosis. Two children with an advanced form of               with therapy given in multiple sessions other problems may be
neoplastic disease also died shortly after treatment. They were      encountered. Work with transplanted animal tumours indicates
given opiates for relief of distress and died of respiratory com-    that heating to a degree insufficient to produce a cure has a
plications. Another patient died of fibrosing alveolitis, possibly   stimulatory effect on the spread and growth of metastases
due to repeated exposure to the hot, moist, ventilating gases        (Brett and Schloerb, 1962; Dickson and Ellis, 1974) and may
then in use (Henderson and Pettigrew, 1971) or as a result of        allow repair of sublethal damage to the tumour cells to take
treatment with bleomycin six months previously.                      place (Palzer and Heidelberger, 1973 b). Heat-resistant strains
                                                                     of cultured human tumours have been produced by exposure to
                                                                     sublethal hyperthermic damage (Selawry et al., 1957). In this
RECOVERY AFTER TREATMENT                                             series some of the patients with responsive tumours who were
Narcosis is maintained during treatment with short-acting            treated with multiple sessions of heating without chemotherapy
barbiturates and the patient is awake before leaving the theatre.    seemed to develop less sensitive tumours. Patients who responded
Patients with sensitive tumours show evidence of a systemic          to chemotherapy plus hyperthermia continued to respond to
reaction after the first treatment, especially if it is prolonged.   further combined treatments given when there was tumour
They develop a persistent tachycardia with a low blood pressure      recurrence.
and may remain pyrexial for up to 48 hours. Recovery takes               This work was supported by a grant from the Melville Trust
place more rapidly after a subsequent treatment if'given within      for Cancer Research, Edinburgh.
a week. After the first treatment patients may be managed on a          We should like to thank the many consultants who referred
day-stay basis, coming into hospital on the morning of treatment     cases, in particular Mr. M. A. Henderson, of the Dunmfries and
and being discharged the next day. Patients with unresponsive        Galloway Royal Infirmary, who helped greatly in the early stages
tumours show no toxic effects and are fully recovered within         of the work, and also Dr. Neil McLean, consultant pathologist,
eight hours. If treatment is extended beyond four or five hours      Western General Hospital, for his advice and help in reporting the
post-treatment jaundice may develop.                                 pathological findings in these patients.
                                                                        Requests for reprints should be sent to Mr. A. N. Smith, De-
                                                                     partment of Clinical Surgery, Western General Hospital, Edin-
                                                                     burgh EH4 2XU.
Discussion
There have been no deaths during hyperthermia in over 200
treatment sessions. Of the four adult deaths occurring within        References
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