| Literature DB >> 18274845 |
Hiroya Saito1, Tadahiro Takada, Masaru Miyazaki, Shuichi Miyakawa, Kazuhiro Tsukada, Masato Nagino, Satoshi Kondo, Junji Furuse, Toshio Tsuyuguchi, Fumio Kimura, Hideyuki Yoshitomi, Satoshi Nozawa, Masahiro Yoshida, Keita Wada, Hodaka Amano, Fumihiko Miura.
Abstract
The purpose of radiation therapy for unresectable biliary tract cancer is to prolong survival or prolong stent patency, and to provide palliation of pain. For unresectable bile duct cancer, there are a number of studies showing that radiation therapy is superior to the best supportive care. Although radiation therapy is used in many institutions, no large randomized controlled trials (RCTs) have been performed to date and the evidence level supporting the superiority of this treatment is low. Because long-term relief of jaundice is difficult without using biliary stenting, a combination of radiation therapy and stent placement is commonly used. As radiation therapy, external-beam radiation therapy is usually performed, but combined use of intraluminal brachytherapy with external beam radiation therapy is more useful for making the treatment more effective. There are many reports demonstrating improved response rates as well as extended survival and time to recurrence achieved by this combination therapy. Despite the low level of the evidence, this combination therapy is performed at many institutions. It is expected that multi-institutional RCTs will be carried out. Unresectable gallbladder cancer with a large focus is usually extensive, and normal organs with high radio sensitivity exist contiguously with it. Therefore, only limited anticancer effects are to be expected from external beam radiation therapy for this type of cancer. The number of reports on ampullary cancer is small and the role of radiation therapy in this cancer has not been established. Combination treatment for ampullary cancer consists of either a single use of intraoperative radiation therapy, postoperative external beam radiation therapy or intraluminal brachytherapy, or a combination of two or three of these therapies. Intraoperative radiation therapy is superior in that it enables precise irradiation to the target site, thereby protecting adjacent highly radiosensitive normal tissues from irradiation. There are reports showing extended survival, although not significant, in groups undergoing intraoperative or postoperative radiation therapy compared with groups without radiation therapy. To date, there are no reports of large RCTs focusing on the significance of radiation therapy as a postoperative adjuvant treatment, so its usefulness as a postoperative adjuvant treatment is not proven. An alternative treatment is photodynamic therapy. There is an RCT demonstrating that, in unresectable bile duct cancer, extended survival and improved quality of life (QOL) have been achieved through a combination of photodynamic therapy and biliary stenting, compared with biliary stenting alone. Results from large RCTs are desired.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18274845 PMCID: PMC2794340 DOI: 10.1007/s00534-007-1281-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hepatobiliary Pancreat Surg ISSN: 0944-1166
Strength of recommendations1
| A, Strongly recommend performing the clinical action |
| B, Recommend performing the clinical action |
| C1, The clinical action may be considered although there is a lack of high-level scientific evidence for its use. May be useful |
| C2, Clinical action not definitively recommended because of insufficient scientific evidence. Evidence insufficient to support or deny usefulness |
| D, Recommend not performing the clinical action |
Levels of evidence11
| Level I | Systematic review/meta-analysis |
| Level II | One or more randomized clinical trials |
| Level III | Nonrandomized controlled trials |
| Level IV | Analytic epidemiology (cohort studies and case-control studies) |
| Level V | Descriptive study (case reports and case-series studies) |
| Level VI | Opinions of expert panels and individual experts not based on patient’s data |
Fig. 1a,bPercutaneous cholangiograms in a 67-year-old man with hilar bile duct carcinoma (Bismuth IV). a Before radiation therapy, cholangiogram shows complete obstruction of the bile duct at the bilateral hepatic duct and upper common bile duct. b After radiation therapy (external beam irradiation 44 Gy and intraluminal irradiation 15 Gy), the bilateral hepatic duct and upper common bile duct wall is smooth, and passage is good