Although the treatment of choice for stage I lung cancer patients is surgery, a lot of patients h... more Although the treatment of choice for stage I lung cancer patients is surgery, a lot of patients have a high comorbidity and are medically inoperable. Bronchoscopy, as a central technique in diagnosing lung cancer, has the potency to apply endoscopic therapy to small lung lesions in a minimally invasive way in patients with high risk for surgery. Unfortunately, bronchoscopy cannot always reach lesions in the peripheral lung, in particular the smaller lesions. Therefore, new guidance techniques like virtual bronchoscopy and electromagnetic navigation are now available and instead of using the systems as a diagnostic tool, these techniques may provide an option for therapeutic interventions to inoperable lung tumor patients. With endoscopic fiducial marker placement for robotic radiosurgery and endoluminal high-dose brachytherapy, local radiotherapy of peripheral lung tumors becomes feasible, reducing radiotherapy-induced toxicity. Radiofrequency tissue ablation through the working channel of a flexible bronchoscope may be a chance of making a diagnosis and a curative treatment in one endoscopic session. However, technical improvements of the ablation probes are currently necessary to expand the sizes of ablated areas. Even though the technologies are very attractive and pilot data are extremely encouraging, more studies establishing selection criteria and best utility are needed.
Journal of cystic fibrosis : official journal of the European Cystic Fibrosis Society, Jan 23, 2015
Chronic inflammation and remodeling of the airways remain a hallmark of cystic fibrosis (CF). How... more Chronic inflammation and remodeling of the airways remain a hallmark of cystic fibrosis (CF). However, knowledge of the associated mucosal micro-anatomical changes is limited. We evaluated the potential of optical coherence tomography (OCT) for in vivo imaging of the upper airway mucosa in CF patients. A flexible OCT probe was used for cross-sectional imaging of the nasal mucosa in 25 CF patients and 25 healthy controls. OCT images showed mucosal details including epithelium, basement membrane, lamina propria with seromucinous glands, and underlying cartilaginous structures. Mean nasal mucosa and epithelial layer thickness were increased in CF compared to controls. In CF patients, antibiotic therapy was associated with reduced nasal mucosa thickening. OCT detected mucosal changes associated with upper airway inflammation and response to antibiotic therapy in CF patients. OCT may be a useful tool for quantitative in vivo assessment of structural changes of the airway mucosa.
Although the treatment of choice for stage I lung cancer patients is surgery, a lot of patients h... more Although the treatment of choice for stage I lung cancer patients is surgery, a lot of patients have a high comorbidity and are medically inoperable. Bronchoscopy, as a central technique in diagnosing lung cancer, has the potency to apply endoscopic therapy to small lung lesions in a minimally invasive way in patients with high risk for surgery. Unfortunately, bronchoscopy cannot always reach lesions in the peripheral lung, in particular the smaller lesions. Therefore, new guidance techniques like virtual bronchoscopy and electromagnetic navigation are now available and instead of using the systems as a diagnostic tool, these techniques may provide an option for therapeutic interventions to inoperable lung tumor patients. With endoscopic fiducial marker placement for robotic radiosurgery and endoluminal high-dose brachytherapy, local radiotherapy of peripheral lung tumors becomes feasible, reducing radiotherapy-induced toxicity. Radiofrequency tissue ablation through the working channel of a flexible bronchoscope may be a chance of making a diagnosis and a curative treatment in one endoscopic session. However, technical improvements of the ablation probes are currently necessary to expand the sizes of ablated areas. Even though the technologies are very attractive and pilot data are extremely encouraging, more studies establishing selection criteria and best utility are needed.
Journal of cystic fibrosis : official journal of the European Cystic Fibrosis Society, Jan 23, 2015
Chronic inflammation and remodeling of the airways remain a hallmark of cystic fibrosis (CF). How... more Chronic inflammation and remodeling of the airways remain a hallmark of cystic fibrosis (CF). However, knowledge of the associated mucosal micro-anatomical changes is limited. We evaluated the potential of optical coherence tomography (OCT) for in vivo imaging of the upper airway mucosa in CF patients. A flexible OCT probe was used for cross-sectional imaging of the nasal mucosa in 25 CF patients and 25 healthy controls. OCT images showed mucosal details including epithelium, basement membrane, lamina propria with seromucinous glands, and underlying cartilaginous structures. Mean nasal mucosa and epithelial layer thickness were increased in CF compared to controls. In CF patients, antibiotic therapy was associated with reduced nasal mucosa thickening. OCT detected mucosal changes associated with upper airway inflammation and response to antibiotic therapy in CF patients. OCT may be a useful tool for quantitative in vivo assessment of structural changes of the airway mucosa.
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Papers by Nicolas Kahn