Literature DB >> 27382341

Transarterial chemoembolization with drug-eluting beads versus conventional transarterial chemoembolization in locally advanced hepatocellular carcinoma.

Johannes Baur1, Christian O Ritter2, Christoph-Thomas Germer1, Ingo Klein1, Ralph Kickuth2, Ulrich Steger1.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: In hepatocellular carcinoma patients with large or multinodal tumors, where curative treatment options are not feasible, transarterial therapies play a major role. Transarterial chemoembolization (TACE) with drug-eluting beads (DEB-TACE) is a promising new approach due to higher intratumoral and lower systemic concentration of the chemotherapeutic agent compared to conventional TACE (cTACE). PATIENTS AND METHODS: In a retrospective analysis, 32 patients with hepatocellular carcinoma who received either DEB or a cTACE were compared regarding survival time, disease recurrence, and side effects such as pain and fever.
RESULTS: No significant differences could be detected between the cTACE and DEB-TACE groups with regard to mean hospital stay, appearance of postinterventional fever, or 30-day mortality. However, the application of intravenous analgesics as postinterventional pain medication was needed more often in patients treated with DEB-TACE (57.1% vs 12.5%, P=0.0281). The overall median survival after the initial procedure was 10.8 months in the cTACE group and 9.2 months in the DEB-TACE group, showing no significant difference.
CONCLUSION: No survival benefit for patients treated with either DEB-TACE or cTACE was observed. Surprisingly, a higher rate of postinterventional pain could be detected after DEB-TACE.

Entities:  

Keywords:  drug-eluting beads; hepatocellular carcinoma; transarterial chemoembolization

Year:  2016        PMID: 27382341      PMCID: PMC4920234          DOI: 10.2147/HMER.S105395

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hepat Med        ISSN: 1179-1535


Introduction

Only 10%–20% of patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) have the option for curative therapy such as resection, transplantation, or local ablation.1 According to the Barcelona clinic liver cancer tumor staging, transarterial chemoembolization (TACE) is performed in patients with large or multinodal tumors where curative treatments are not feasible. However, these patients need to have a sufficient remaining liver function (Child-Pugh class A and B liver cirrhosis) and absence of extrahepatic tumor manifestation, macrovascular invasion, and cancer-related symptoms (Barcelona clinic liver cancer intermediate stage B).2,3 There is evidence that TACE is able to improve survival in these patients compared to symptomatic treatments alone.4–6 Like every invasive treatment, TACE bears the risk of side effects. The most common adverse events are abdominal pain, nausea, fever, and elevated transaminases during the initial days post intervention. Severe side effects such as hepatic decompensation, gastrointestinal bleeding, or treatment-related death are found in <10% of the patients treated with TACE.2,3 During TACE, a chemotherapeutic agent is administered into the feeding artery of the HCC nodule followed by application of an embolic material to gain a high intratumoral concentration of chemotherapeutics and tumor necrosis.7 Nonresorbable drug-eluting beads (DEB) are new embolic agents used in TACE. First studies showed higher intratumoral and lower systemic concentration of doxorubicin compared to the common doxorubicinlipiodol mixture, which is used as an embolic agent in conventional TACE (cTACE).8–10 Prospective randomized controlled trials comparing cTACE with DEB-TACE showed less systemic side effects of the chemotherapeutic agent but no superiority in tumor response or overall survival after DEB-TACE.7,11 However, some retrospective studies showed better treatment response and longer time to progression after DEB-TACE.12,13 Our retrospective study was conducted to compare tumor response and survival and postinterventional side effects such as pain and fever that influence the postinterventional quality of life in HCC patients treated with either cTACE or DEB-TACE.

Patients and methods

Patients

Data of 32 patients suffering from unresectable HCC and treated with TACE were retrospectively analyzed. HCC was diagnosed according to the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases Practice Guidelines with one or two dynamic imaging techniques. In case of doubt, a biopsy was performed.3 The protocol for this study was approved by the ethics committee of the University of Wuerzburg; as such, no written informed consent from each individual patient was required for inclusion to this study, since it was retrospective, and all data was de-identified. Procedural consent for TACE was obtained from each patient. Patient’s inclusion criteria were 1) diagnosed HCC outside the Milan criteria (one single lesion <5 cm or three lesions <3 cm each14) and 2) treatment with DEB-TACE or cTACE. Patients were excluded from the analysis if 1) the tumor was inside the Milan criteria; 2) the patients were consecutively treated with curative procedures (transplantation, resection, or local ablative methods) after initial TACE; or 3) the patients received selective internal radiation therapy after initial TACE. As the treatment with targeted therapy like sorafenib is a common part in the treatment of advanced HCC nowadays, patients receiving this form of medication were not excluded from the study. No patient received sorafenib before or during the first TACE procedure. Sorafenib was administered only in case of recurrent disease not feasible for TACE or as additive therapy after TACE. Decision for targeted therapies was made by interdisciplinary tumor board consensus.

Procedure

As described elsewhere, each procedure was performed via femoral artery puncture.12,15 First, standardized pressure arteriography of celiac and superior mesenteric arteries was performed to investigate arterial anatomy of the liver, vascular supply of tumor nodes, and patency of the portal vein. Chemotherapeutics and embolic agents were infused either superselectively into the tumor-supplying arteries or nonselectively into a single liver lobe or the whole organ according to tumor size and location. A superselective procedure was performed in 33.3% of the patients in the cTACE group and 21.4% of patients in the DEB-TACE group. For cTACE, a mixture of doxorubicin (n=11) or epirubicin (n=7) and Lipiodol was used. For DEB-TACE, doxorubicin was applied in nine cases and epirubicin in five. Dosages depended on body surface area and tumor size. The choice of chemotherapeutic agent and the decision of cTACE versus DEB-TACE were at the discretion of the performing radiologist. For DEB-TACE, DEB (DC Bead; Biocompatibles, Farnham, UK) with a diameter of 300–500 µm were used. According to the body surface area and tumor size, the concentration of the used chemotherapeutic drug was determined. Embolization with microspheres (Bead Block; Biocompatibles) after cTACE or DEB-TACE application was a facultative treatment to consolidate stasis within the feeding arteries.

Study outcomes

The primary outcomes of the study were 30-day mortality, peri-interventional need of pain medication, fever ≥38.0°C (100.4°F), and elevation of transaminases to evaluate the appearance of a postembolization syndrome after cTACE or DEB-TACE. Another primary outcome of the study was overall and median survival after the initial TACE. The secondary outcomes were local and extrafocal recurrence of the disease after 3 months and 6 months detected in radiologic imaging, which is defined as newly detected areas of contrast enhancement at the edge of the known HCC nodules or newly detected intra- or extrahepatic manifestation of HCC. The patients were usually followed up every 3 months after the initial TACE with the same cross-sectional multiphase imaging used before the initial TACE (multislice computed tomography or dedicated magnetic resonance imaging). The follow-up cases and their further treatment were discussed in an interdisciplinary conference.

Statistical analysis

A P-value <0.05 was defined to be significant. A unpaired t-test was performed to investigate continuous variables, and a chi-square test was used to investigate categorical variables. The Kaplan–Meier method was used to estimate the overall and median survival.

Results

Thirty-two patients treated with TACE met the abovementioned inclusion criteria. Patients’ characteristics are shown in Table 1. In all, 18 patients (56.3%) received cTACE and 14 patients (43.8%) DEB-TACE. There were no differences due to sex, age, tumor burden, Child-Pugh stage, Okuda stage, and initial Model for End-stage Liver Disease score. In average, 1.61 procedures per patient in the cTACE group and 1.71 procedures per patient in the DEB-TACE group have been performed. A total of ten patients (55.6%) in the cTACE group and two patients (14.3%) in the DEB-TACE group received additional bland embolization. None of the patients received sorafenib before or during the first TACE procedure. In all, 33.3% of patients in the cTACE group and 57.1% of patients in the DEB-TACE group received sorafenib in the course after the first TACE (P=0.1780).
Table 1

Characteristics of study collective

CharacteristicsOverallcTACEDEB-TACEP-value
Patients, n (%)
 Total32 (100)18 (56.3)14 (43.8)0.854
 Male30 (93.8)17 (94.4)13 (92.9)
Female2 (6.3)1 (5.6)1 (7.1)
Age (years)
Mean66.868.564.70.2613
Tumor burden, n (%)
Unilobar12 (37.5)7 (38.8)5 (35.7)0.854
Bilobar20 (62.5)11 (61.1)9 (64.3)
Multinodular (≥4 nodes)19 (59.4)8 (44.4)11 (78.6)0.0512
Okuda stage,a n (%)
I12 (40.0)7 (43.8)5 (35.7)0.7398
II15 (50.0)7 (43.8)8 (57.1)
III3 (10.0)2 (12.5)1 (7.1)
Child-Pugh class,a n (%)
A21 (67.7)10 (58.8)11 (78.6)0.3200
B8 (25.8)5 (29.7)3 (21.4)
C2 (6.5)2 (11.8)0 (0.0)
MELD scorea
Mean10.011.18.80.0771
Targeted therapy, n (%)
Sorafenib after initial TACE14 (41.4)6 (33.3)8 (57.1)0.1780

Note:

In up to two cases, patients could not be classified due to missing data.

Abbreviations: cTACE, conventional transarterial chemoembolization; DEB-TACE, transarterial chemoembolization with drug-eluting beads; MELD, Model for End-stage Liver Disease; TACE, transarterial chemoembolization.

Peri-interventional adverse events

There was no statistically significant difference between cTACE and DEB-TACE with regard to 30-day mortality. In all, three patients died within 30 days after initial TACE, two in the cTACE group (11.1%) and one in DEB-TACE group (7.1%). The reasons for death were gallbladder rupture with consecutive abdominal sepsis and decompensation of liver cirrhosis in the cTACE group and rupture of the tumor with consecutive hemorrhagic shock in the DEB-TACE group. Between the cTACE and DEB-TACE groups, no statistically significant differences could be detected with regard to mean hospital stay (3.7 days vs 3.0 days) and appearance of postinterventional fever of ≥38.0°C (100.4°F) within the first 3 days after intervention (50.0% vs 50.0%). In all, five patients (31.3%) in the cTACE group and ten patients (71.1%) in the DEB-TACE group required postinterventional application of analgesics (P=0.0281). Intravenous analgesics as well as opiates were also needed more often in patients treated with DEB-TACE (Table 2). Additionally, DEB-TACE patients did show a trend toward a higher increase in transaminase levels within 3 days after intervention, although differences did not reach statistical significance (data not shown).
Table 2

Morbidity and mortality after cTACE and DEB-TACE

Postinterventional courseOverallcTACEDEB-TACEP-value
Mortality
Within 30 days, n (%)3 (9.4)2 (11.1)1 (7.1)0.7024
Analgetic requirements
Data available, n301614
Pain medication applied, n (%)15 (50.0)5 (31.3)10 (71.1)0.0281
iv application, n (%)10 (33.3)2 (12.5)8 (57.1)0.0097
Opiate, n (%)10 (33.3)2 (12.5)8 (57.1)0.0097
Pyrexia
Data available, n271614
≥38.0°C/100.4°F, n (%)15 (55.6)8 (50.0)7 (50.0)1.0000
Hospital stay after TACE (d)
Mean3.23.73.00.2122

Abbreviations: cTACE, conventional transarterial chemoembolization; DEB-TACE, transarterial chemoembolization with drug-eluting beads; iv, intravenous; TACE, transarterial chemoembolization; d, days.

Median and overall survival

Figure 1 shows the overall survival after initial TACE of patients included in this study. A difference or a trend toward superiority of one of the procedures in the overall survival after initial TACE could not be detected. The overall median survival after the initial procedure was 10.8 months in the cTACE group and 9.2 months in the DEB-TACE group, showing no statistically significant difference.
Figure 1

Overall survival after initial cTACE and DEB-TACE.

Abbreviations: TACE, transarterial chemoembolization; cTACE, conventional transarterial chemoembolization; DEB-TACE, transarterial chemoembolization with drug-eluting beads.

Therefore, a substratification in the following subgroups has been performed: bilobar tumor burden, multinodular tumor burden (≤4 tumor nodules), Child-Pugh class A cirrhosis, and not superselective procedure (TACE of an entire liver lobe or whole liver). In none of the subgroups, superiority of a single procedure in the overall or median survival after the initial TACE could be detected (Table 3). Yet, in case of multinodular tumor burden in patients with Child-Pugh class A cirrhosis, a trend toward longer median survival in cTACE could be detected.
Table 3

Median survival after cTACE and DEB-TACE

Median survival (months after initial TACE)cTACEDEB-TACERatio95% CI of ratio
Overall10.89.21.170(0.5054–2.707)
Multinodular tumor burden15.110.71.410(0.4612–4.310)
Bilobar tumor burden15.413.01.158(0.3822–3.675)
Child-Pugh class A22.110.72.061(0.6540–6.492)
Not superselective procedure10.810.71.007(0.3778–2.682)

Abbreviations: cTACE, conventional transarterial chemoembolization; DEB-TACE, transarterial chemoembolization with drug-eluting beads; TACE, transarterial chemoembolization; CI, confidence interval.

Radiological recurrence of disease

Local or extrafo0cal recurrence of HCC 3 months and 6 months after the initial TACE as defined earlier is shown in Table 4. No differences between the cTACE and DEB-TACE could be detected. However, there was a trend toward a higher rate of extrafocal recurrence in patients treated with DEB-TACE.
Table 4

Recurrence of disease after cTACE and DEB-TACE

OverallcTACEDEB-TACEP-value
3 months after initial TACE
Number of patients in follow-up261511
Local recurrence, n (%)16 (61.5)9 (60.0)7 (63.6)0.8506
Extrafocal progression, n (%)12 (46.2)5 (33.3)7 (63.6)0.1257
6 months after initial TACE
Number of patients in follow-up261511
Local recurrence, n (%)18 (69.2)10 (66.7)8 (72.7)0.7408
Extrafocal progression, n (%)14 (53.8)7 (46.7)7 (63.6)0.3912

Abbreviations: cTACE, conventional transarterial chemoembolization; DEB-TACE, transarterial chemoembolization with drug-eluting beads; TACE, transarterial chemoembolization.

Discussion

For patients with HCC not suitable for curative treatment options, transarterial therapy with chemotherapeutic DEB is a new alternative for locoregional treatment. Several preclinical and clinical studies showed high intratumoral and low systemic dosages of doxorubicin8,10,16 resulting in a satisfying safety profile and high rates of tumor response.17,18 Although these studies showed promising results, prospective randomized controlled trials could not prove significant superiority of DEB-TACE over cTACE regarding tumor response in the overall setting.7,11 However, less drug-related side effects, eg, fever, liver toxicity events, cardiotoxicity, and alopecia, after the application of DEB were observed.7,15 Survival rates comparing cTACE and DEB-TACE have been already investigated by prospective randomized controlled trials, in retrospective studies as well as in meta-analyses, and the results are heterogeneous (Table 5). Two of these studies showed a prolonged overall and median survival in patients treated with DEB-TACE,12,19 while the other studies could not demonstrate relevant differences.11,13,20,21 One study even showed a higher response rate and a longer time to progression after conventional chemoembolization.22 Our data did not show any differences in the overall and median survival, but there were differences in the median survival showing better results after cTACE in patients with multinodular or bilobar tumor burden and in patients having liver cirrhosis in Child-Pugh class A.
Table 5

Literature on cTACE versus DEB-TACE

ReferencePatients (n)Median survival (mo)
Tumor response (%)
Time to progression (mo)
Adverse events
cTACEDEB-TACEcTACEDEB-TACEcTACEDEB-TACE
Facciorusso et al2224939.032.085.374.817.011.0No differences
Golfieri et al1117728.029.074.174.79.09.0Less pain after DEB-TACE
Kloeckner et al2125013.612.3n/an/an/an/aNo differences
Song et al1312924.732.249.481.67.611.7No differences
Dhanasekaran et al12713.813.4n/an/an/an/aNo difference in mortality

Abbreviations: cTACE, conventional transarterial chemoembolization; DEB-TACE, transarterial chemoembolization with drug-eluting beads; mo, months; n/a, not applicable.

Investigating local recurrence of disease after 3 months and 6 months also did not reveal any differences between the study groups. Surprisingly, there was a trend toward more cases of extrafocal recurrence in the DEB-TACE group, although this difference was not statistically significant. This could be explained by the higher amount of multinodular HCCs in the DEB-TACE group. As mentioned earlier, the safety of DEB could be confirmed in former studies. It was also shown that fewer side effects occurred after DEB-TACE in comparison to the conventional procedure.7,15 In contrast to these data, there was no trend for less toxic effects of the DEB in comparison to cTACE in our analysis. This is in accordance with the data of adverse events published by the Precision Italia Study Group comparing DEB-TACE and cTACE in 177 patients,11 showing no differences in the rate of postinterventional fever, increased alanine transaminase, nausea, or liver function worsening. However, this randomized study revealed advantage of DEB-TACE in postprocedural abdominal pain. In contrast to this result, our analysis showed that DEB-TACE-treated patients experienced increased postinterventional pain and consecutively required statistically significant more pain medication within the first 3 days after the procedure. Although our data are limited by the small study population and its retrospective character, this issue was never described in previous studies comparing the two modalities of TACE. To avoid, that the extend of liver tissue treated with TACE of both modalities influenced these results, we performed a subgroup analysis of patients receiving TACE of an entire liver lobe or the whole liver. This subgroup analysis confirmed, that patients receiving DEB-TACE required significantly more opiate containing pain medication (50.0% vs 8.3%, P=0.0289). Postprocedural fever was not a factor for the administration of postoperative pain medication or nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug since there was no difference in the appearance of postinterventional fever in the two groups. The significant difference in pain medication with a fivefold higher application rate of opiates in the DEB-TACE group is not explainable by the higher amount of multinodular tumor burden in the DEB-TACE group. The major adverse events appeared in 9.4% of patients with no advantage for cTACE or DEB-TACE. In comparison to other study collectives, this rate seems quite high. However, this high 30-day mortality could be due to a high rate of not superselective procedures (71.9%) in patients with a high tumor burden with consecutive higher risk of maldistribution of embolic agent or severe liver toxicity with consecutive liver failure.

Conclusion

Our study could not confirm superiority regarding tumor response and overall survival of DEB-TACE over cTACE. Surprisingly, a higher rate of postinterventional pain was detected and described for the first time after DEB-TACE.
  22 in total

1.  Comparative study between doxorubicin-eluting beads and conventional transarterial chemoembolization for treatment of hepatocellular carcinoma.

Authors:  Myeong Jun Song; Ho Jong Chun; Do Seon Song; Hee Yeon Kim; Sun Hong Yoo; Chung-Hwa Park; Si Hyun Bae; Jong Young Choi; U Im Chang; Jin Mo Yang; Hae Giu Lee; Seung Kew Yoon
Journal:  J Hepatol       Date:  2012-07-20       Impact factor: 25.083

2.  Liver, gastrointestinal, and cardiac toxicity in intermediate hepatocellular carcinoma treated with PRECISION TACE with drug-eluting beads: results from the PRECISION V randomized trial.

Authors:  Thomas J Vogl; Johannes Lammer; Riccardo Lencioni; Katerina Malagari; Anthony Watkinson; Frank Pilleul; Alban Denys; Clara Lee
Journal:  AJR Am J Roentgenol       Date:  2011-10       Impact factor: 3.959

3.  Comparison of conventional transarterial chemoembolization (TACE) and chemoembolization with doxorubicin drug eluting beads (DEB) for unresectable hepatocelluar carcinoma (HCC).

Authors:  Renumathy Dhanasekaran; David A Kooby; Charles A Staley; John S Kauh; Vinit Khanna; Hyun S Kim
Journal:  J Surg Oncol       Date:  2010-05-01       Impact factor: 3.454

4.  Drug-eluting bead loaded with doxorubicin versus conventional Lipiodol-based transarterial chemoembolization in the treatment of hepatocellular carcinoma: a case-control study of Asian patients.

Authors:  Myeong Jun Song; Chung-Hwa Park; Jin Dong Kim; Hee Yeon Kim; Si Hyun Bae; Jong Young Choi; Seung Kew Yoon; Ho Jong Chun; Byung Gil Choi; Hae Giu Lee
Journal:  Eur J Gastroenterol Hepatol       Date:  2011-06       Impact factor: 2.566

Review 5.  Liver transplantation for the treatment of hepatocellular carcinoma.

Authors:  Steven I Hanish; Stuart J Knechtle
Journal:  Oncology (Williston Park)       Date:  2011-07       Impact factor: 2.990

6.  Drug-eluting beads versus conventional chemoembolization for the treatment of unresectable hepatocellular carcinoma.

Authors:  Antonio Facciorusso; Luigi Mariani; Carlo Sposito; Carlo Spreafico; Marco Bongini; Carlo Morosi; Tommaso Cascella; Alfonso Marchianò; Tiziana Camerini; Sherrie Bhoori; Federica Brunero; Michele Barone; Vincenzo Mazzaferro
Journal:  J Gastroenterol Hepatol       Date:  2016-03       Impact factor: 4.029

7.  Transcatheter chemoembolization in the treatment of HCC in patients not eligible for curative treatments: midterm results of doxorubicin-loaded DC bead.

Authors:  Katerina Malagari; Efthimia Alexopoulou; Katerina Chatzimichail; Brenda Hall; John Koskinas; Samantha Ryan; Eva Gallardo; Alexis Kelekis; Athanassios Gouliamos; Dimitrios Kelekis
Journal:  Abdom Imaging       Date:  2008 Sep-Oct

8.  Management of hepatocellular carcinoma: an update.

Authors:  Jordi Bruix; Morris Sherman
Journal:  Hepatology       Date:  2011-03       Impact factor: 17.425

9.  Prospective randomized study of doxorubicin-eluting-bead embolization in the treatment of hepatocellular carcinoma: results of the PRECISION V study.

Authors:  Johannes Lammer; Katarina Malagari; Thomas Vogl; Frank Pilleul; Alban Denys; Anthony Watkinson; Michael Pitton; Geraldine Sergent; Thomas Pfammatter; Sylvain Terraz; Yves Benhamou; Yves Avajon; Thomas Gruenberger; Maria Pomoni; Herbert Langenberger; Marcus Schuchmann; Jerome Dumortier; Christian Mueller; Patrick Chevallier; Riccardo Lencioni
Journal:  Cardiovasc Intervent Radiol       Date:  2009-11-12       Impact factor: 2.740

10.  Conventional transarterial chemoembolization versus drug-eluting bead transarterial chemoembolization for the treatment of hepatocellular carcinoma.

Authors:  Roman Kloeckner; Arndt Weinmann; Friederike Prinz; Daniel Pinto dos Santos; Christian Ruckes; Christoph Dueber; Michael Bernhard Pitton
Journal:  BMC Cancer       Date:  2015-06-10       Impact factor: 4.430

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  14 in total

1.  Neutrophil-to-lymphocyte and platelet-to-lymphocyte ratios as predictors of tumor response in hepatocellular carcinoma after DEB-TACE.

Authors:  Isabel Theresa Schobert; Lynn Jeanette Savic; Julius Chapiro; Khaled Bousabarah; Evan Chen; Fabian Laage-Gaupp; Jonathan Tefera; Nariman Nezami; MingDe Lin; Jeffrey Pollak; Todd Schlachter
Journal:  Eur Radiol       Date:  2020-05-19       Impact factor: 5.315

2.  Efficacy and safety profile of drug-eluting beads transarterial chemoembolization by CalliSpheres® beads in Chinese hepatocellular carcinoma patients.

Authors:  Guan-Hui Zhou; Jun Han; Jun-Hui Sun; Yue-Lin Zhang; Tan-Yang Zhou; Chun-Hui Nie; Tong-Yin Zhu; Sheng-Qun Chen; Bao-Quan Wang; Zi-Niu Yu; Hong-Liang Wang; Li-Ming Chen; Wei-Lin Wang; Shu-Sen Zheng
Journal:  BMC Cancer       Date:  2018-06-08       Impact factor: 4.430

3.  Comprehensive analysis of common safety profiles and their predictive factors in 520 records of liver cancer patients treated by drug-eluting beads transarterial chemoembolization.

Authors:  Junhui Sun; Guanhui Zhou; Yuelin Zhang; Tanyang Zhou; Chunhui Nie; Tongyin Zhu; Shengqun Chen; Baoquan Wang; Ziniu Yu; Hongliang Wang; Xinhua Chen; Liangjie Hong; Liming Chen; Weilin Wang; Shusen Zheng
Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  2018-06       Impact factor: 1.889

4.  Drug-eluting bead transarterial chemoembolization (TACE) vs conventional TACE in treating hepatocellular carcinoma patients with multiple conventional TACE treatments history: A comparison of efficacy and safety.

Authors:  Hui Li; Fucang Wu; Min Duan; Guodong Zhang
Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  2019-05       Impact factor: 1.817

Review 5.  Update on Transarterial Chemoembolization with Drug-Eluting Microspheres for Hepatocellular Carcinoma.

Authors:  Yasir M Nouri; Jin Hyoung Kim; Hyun-Ki Yoon; Heung-Kyu Ko; Ji Hoon Shin; Dong Il Gwon
Journal:  Korean J Radiol       Date:  2018-12-27       Impact factor: 3.500

6.  Measuring the density of iodine depositions: Detecting an invisible residual tumor after conventional transarterial chemoembolization.

Authors:  Johannes Haubold; Johannes M Ludwig; Yan Li; Matthias Buechter; Axel Wetter; Lale Umutlu; Jens M Theysohn
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2020-01-29       Impact factor: 3.240

7.  Efficacy and Safety of Drug-Eluting Beads Transarterial Chemoembolization by CalliSpheres® in 275 Hepatocellular Carcinoma Patients: Results From the Chinese CalliSpheres® Transarterial Chemoembolization in Liver Cancer (CTILC) Study.

Authors:  Junhui Sun; Guanhui Zhou; Xiaoxi Xie; Wenjiang Gu; Jing Huang; Dedong Zhu; Wenhao Hu; Qinming Hou; Changsheng Shi; Tiefeng Li; Xin Zhang; Wenbin Ji; Shihong Ying; Zhiyi Peng; Jian Zhou; Zhihai Yu; Jiansong Ji; Haijun Du; Xiaohua Guo; Jian Fang; Jun Han; Huanhai Xu; Zhichao Sun; Wenqiang Yu; Guoliang Shao; Xia Wu; Hongjie Hu; Ling Li; Jiaping Zheng; Jun Luo; Yutang Chen; Guohong Cao; Tingyang Hu
Journal:  Oncol Res       Date:  2019-09-26       Impact factor: 5.574

8.  Five-year outcome of conventional and drug-eluting transcatheter arterial chemoembolization in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma.

Authors:  Yi-Sheng Liu; Chia-Ying Lin; Ming-Tsung Chuang; Chia-Ying Lin; Yi-Shan Tsai; Chien-Kuo Wang; Ming-Ching Ou
Journal:  BMC Gastroenterol       Date:  2018-08-03       Impact factor: 3.067

9.  Predictive model for acute abdominal pain after transarterial chemoembolization for liver cancer.

Authors:  Li-Fang Bian; Xue-Hong Zhao; Bei-Lei Gao; Sheng Zhang; Guo-Mei Ge; Dong-Di Zhan; Ting-Ting Ye; Yan Zheng
Journal:  World J Gastroenterol       Date:  2020-08-14       Impact factor: 5.742

10.  Drug-eluting beads transarterial chemoembolization by CalliSpheres is effective and well tolerated in treating intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma patients: A preliminary result from CTILC study.

Authors:  Jun Luo; Jiaping Zheng; Changsheng Shi; Jian Fang; Zhiyi Peng; Jing Huang; Junhui Sun; Guanhui Zhou; Tiefeng Li; Dedong Zhu; Huanhai Xu; Qinming Hou; Shihong Ying; Zhichao Sun; Haijun Du; Xiaoxi Xie; Guohong Cao; Wenbin Ji; Jun Han; Wenjiang Gu; Xiaohua Guo; Guoliang Shao; Zhihai Yu; Jian Zhou; Wenqiang Yu; Xin Zhang; Ling Li; Hongjie Hu; Tingyang Hu; Xia Wu; Yutang Chen; Jiansong Ji; Wenhao Hu
Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  2020-03       Impact factor: 1.817

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