| Literature DB >> 30187697 |
Abstract
Stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) is a form of radiotherapy that delivers high doses of irradiation with high precision in a small number of fractions. However, it has not frequently been performed for the liver due to the risk of radiation-induced liver toxicity. Furthermore, liver SBRT is cumbersome because it requires accurate patient repositioning, target localization, control of breathing-related motion, and confers a toxicity risk to the small bowel. Recently, with the advancement of modern technologies including intensity-modulated RT and image-guided RT, SBRT has been shown to significantly improve local control and survival outcomes for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), specifically those unfit for other local therapies. While it can be used as a stand-alone treatment for those patients, it can also be applied either as an alternative or as an adjunct to other HCC therapies (e.g., transarterial chemoembolization, and radiofrequency ablation). SBRT might be an effective and safe bridging therapy for patients awaiting liver transplantation. Furthermore, in recent studies, SBRT has been shown to have a potential role as an immunostimulator, supporting the novel combination strategy of immunoradiotherapy for HCC. In this review, the role of SBRT with some technical issues is discussed. In addition, future implications of SBRT as an immunostimulator are considered. © Copyright: Yonsei University College of Medicine 2018.Entities:
Keywords: Hepatocellular carcinoma; immunotherapy; intensity-modulated radiotherapy; liver tumors; radiotherapy; stereotactic body radiotherapy
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30187697 PMCID: PMC6127430 DOI: 10.3349/ymj.2018.59.8.912
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Yonsei Med J ISSN: 0513-5796 Impact factor: 2.759
Comparison of Treatment Guidelines for Stereotactic Body Radiotherapy-Eligible Hepatocellular Carcinoma
| Guidelines | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BCLC | NCCN | APPLE | KLSCG-NCC | ||
| Single, ≤2 cm, without VI | Subgroup | Very early | Resectable or transplantable | Very early | mUICC Stage I |
| Primary or preferred option | Resection (or LT/RFA/ PEI, if portal pressure/ bilirubin increased) | Resection or LT | Resection (or LT/RFA/PEI, if portal pressure/bilirubin increased) | Resection or RFA | |
| Alternative option | (−) | Locoregional treatment (Ablation, arterial directed therapies, EBRT) | EBRT | TACE, PEI, or EBRT | |
| Single, >2 cm, without VI | Subgroup | Early | Resectable or transplantable | Early | mUICC Stage II |
| Primary or preferred option | LT or RFA/PEI | Resection or LT | LT or RFA/PEI | Resection or RFA | |
| Alternative option | (−) | Locoregional treatment (Ablation, arterial directed therapies, EBRT) | SABR, hypofractionated RT | TACE, LT, or EBRT | |
BCLC, Barcelona clinic liver cancer; NCCN, National Comprehensive Cancer Network; APPLE, Asia Pacific Primary Liver Cancer Expert Meeting; KLCSG-NCC, Korean Liver Cancer Study Group and the National Cancer Center; VI, vascular invasion; LT, liver transplantation; RFA, radiofrequency ablation; PEI, percutaneous ethanol injection; EBRT, external-beam radiotherapy; mUICC, modified Union for International Cancer Control; TACE, transarterial chemoembolization; RT, radiotherapy; SABR, stereotactic ablative radiotherapy.
Fig. 1CT scans of patient cases showing objective responses to SBRT of 60 Gy in 4 fractions for HCC. (A) Before SBRT, the CT scan showed a 3 cm-sized viable HCC after multiple TACE treatments at the dome of the liver (white arrows) (AFP/PIVKA-II: 1017 ng/mL/95 mAU/mL). (B) After SBRT, the 1-year post-SBRT CT scan showed radiologic CR with significantly decreased tumor markers approximating normal levels (AFP/PIVKA-II: 2.04 ng/mL/14 mAU/mL). (C) Before SBRT, a 4 cm-sized HCC was observed in the left lobe (white arrows) (AFP/PIVKA-II: 6.14 ng/mL/31 mAU/mL). (D) After SBRT, the 4-month post-SBRT CT scan showed radiologic CR with further reduced tumor marker levels (AFP/PIVKA-II: 3.38 ng/mL/31 mAU/mL). SBRT, stereotactic-body radiotherapy; HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma; TACE, transarterial chemoembolization; AFP, alpha-fetoprotein; PIVKA-II, prothrombin-induced by vitamin K absence or antagonist-II; CR, complete response.
Fig. 2Different motion management methods in RT. (A) The motion-encompassing method refers to the covering of all possible positions of the moving tumor through the whole breathing cycle using 4D-CT images. Subsequently, a large volume of normal tissue may be irradiated. (B) The breath-hold method refers to let the patient hold breaths for a few seconds under deep inspiration, and then deliver the radiation only when the liver is in a certain position. (C) The forced shallow breathing is a method of using a special external device such as an abdominal compressor to allow the patient to breathe shallow during radiation therapy. Although breath-hold and forced shallow breathing might result in patient discomfort or inconvenience during treatment, it can reduce the respiratory motion for liver tumors and enhance the accuracy. (D) The respiratory gating method is a method of turning on the radiation beam only during a specific respiratory cycle, after accurately grasping the position of a tumor according to a patient's respiratory cycle in advance using 4D-CT images. (E) The real-time tracking method refers to tracking the movement of the tumor along the respiratory cycle using the surrogate on the abdominal surface or internal fiducial marker and then delivering the radiation following the tumor inside the body. No respiratory control and abdominal compression are needed. RT, radiotherapy; 4D, four-dimensional.
Prospective Phase I/II Studies of Stereotactic Body Radiotherapy for HCC
| Reference | Design | RT Aim | Patient number | Indication | Median size (range), cm | Dose | Median f/u (range), mo | Local control | Overall survival |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Goodman, et al. | Phase I | Definitive/Salvage | HCC/metastasis (2/24) | CP-A, Unresectable, tumors <5 | Dose escalation 18–30 Gy/1 fx | 17 (2–55) | 77% (1 yr) | 50% (2 yr) | |
| Cardenes, et al. | Phase I | Definitive | All HCC (17) | CP-A, CP-B, 1-3 lesions, ≤6 cm, PVT allowed, unavailable for resection | CP-A: 36–48 Gy/3 fx | 24 (10–42) | 100% | 75% (1 yr) | |
| Andolino, et al. | Phase II | Definitive | All HCC (60) | CP-A, CP-B, liver-confined HCC, prior TACE included | 3.2 (1–6.5) | CP-A: 44 Gy/3 fx | 27 (2–52) | 90% (2 yr) | 67% (2 yr) |
| Kang, et al. | Phase II | Salvage | All HCC (47) | CP-A, CP-B, Inoperable, Incomplete response after TACE, PVT allowed | 2.9 (1.3–7.8) | 57 (42–60) Gy/3 fx | 17 (6–38) | 95% (2 yr) | 69% (2 yr) |
| Bujold, et al. | Phase I/II [Trial 1], subsequently phase II [Trial 2] | Definitive | All HCC (102) (trial 1: 50, trial 2: 52) | CP-A, PVT allowed, [trial 2] ≤5 tumors, <15 cm | 7.2 (1.4–23.1) | 36 (24–54) Gy/6 fx | 31 (2–36) | 87% (1 yr) | Median 17 mo |
| Kim, et al. | Phase I | Definitive/Salvage | All HCC (18) | CP-A, CP-B, ≤3 tumors, single ≤5 cm, multiple ≤sum 6 cm, previous Tx allowed | 1.9 (1.0–3.3) | Dose escalation 36–60 Gy/4 fx | 23 (11–38) | Radiologic CR: 89%, 49% (2 yr) | 69% (2 yr) |
| Lasley, et al. | Phase I/II | Definitive/Salvage | All HCC (59) | CP-A, CP-B, (Phase I → all CP-B possible, Phase II → only CP-B >7 possible) single ≤6 cm, multiple ≤sum 6 cm, | 33.6 (2.0–107.3) cc | CP-A: 38 Gy/3 fx | 33 (3–61) | 92% for CP-A and 82% for CP-B (2 yr) | Median 45 mo for CP-A, 17 mo for CP-B; 2-yr 72% for CP-A, 33% for CP-B ( |
RT, radiotherapy; HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma; CP, Child-Pugh; PVT, portal vein thrombosis; TACE, transarterial chemoembolization; CR, complete response.
Recent Retrospective Studies of SBRT for HCC
| Reference | Design | RT Aim | Patient number | Indication | Median size (cm) | Dose | Median f/u (range), mo | Local control | Overall survival |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kwon, et al. | Cyberknife | Definitive/Salvage | 42 | CP-A, CP-B, ≤100 cc, unavailable for other local therapies, no EHM | 30–39 Gy/3 fx | 29 (8–49) | 72% (1 yr), 68% (3 yr) | 93% (1 yr), 59% (3 yr) | |
| Seo, at al. | Cyberknife | Salvage | 38 | CP-A, CP-B, <10 cm, all with TACE failure | 33–57 Gy/3–4 fx | 15 (3–27) | 66% (2 yr) | 61% (2 yr) | |
| Louis, et al. | Cyberknife | Definitive/Salvage | 25 | CP-A, CP-B, PVT allowed, previous TACE, op, RFA, nexavar included | 4.5 (1.8–10) | 45 Gy/3 fx | 13 (1–24) | 95% (1 yr) | 79% (1 yr) |
| Huang, et al. | Cyberknife, Matched pair analysis (SBRT vs. other/no Tx) | Salvage | 36 | CP-A, CP-B, CP-C, all with prior Tx, but tumor progressed | 4.4 (1.1–12.3) | 37 (25–48 Gy)/4–5 fx | 14 (2–35) | 88% (1 yr), 75% (2 yr) | 64% (2 yr) |
| Honda, et al. | Linac, TACE alone vs. TACE → SBRT | Salvage | 30 | CP-A, CP-B, solitary, ≤3 cm, all prior TACE, no PVT, no EHM | 1.6 (1–3) | 48 Gy/4 fx or 60 Gy/8 fx | 12 (6–38) | 100% | 100% (1 yr), 100% (3 yr) |
| Jang, et al. | Cyberknife | Definitive/Salvage | 108 | CP-A, CP-B, unsuitable for other Tx or incomplete TACE | 3 (1–7) | 51 (33–60)/3 fx | 30 (4–81) | 87% (2 yr) | 63% (2 yr) |
| Sanuki, et al. | Linac | Definitive/Salvage | 185 | CP-A, CP-B, single, unresectable, no LN mets or EHM | 2.7 (1–5) | CP-A: 40 Gy/5 fx | 24 (3–80) | 91% (3 yr) | 70% (3 yr) |
| Culleton, et al. | 3D-CRT, IMRT, or VMAT | Definitive/Salvage | 29 | CP-B, <10 cm, <5 tumors, life expectancy >3 months, KPS >60%, unresectable | 8.66 (4.1–26.6) | Median 30 Gy/6 fx | 12 SD, 2 PR 6 intrahepatic PD (outfield) | Median 8 months, 32% (1 yr) | |
| BCLC-C | |||||||||
| Bae, et al. | Cyberknife | Definitive/Palliative | 35 | BCLC-C, CP-A, CP-B, vascular invasion or EHM | 45 (30–60) Gy /3–5 fx | 14 (1–44) | 69% (1 yr), 51% (3 yr) | 52% (1 yr), 21% (2 yr) | |
| Huge HCC | |||||||||
| Que, et al. | Cyberknife | Definitive/Salvage | 22 | CP-A, CP-B, ≥10 cm, ECOG≤2 | 11.36 (10–18) | Mainly 40 Gy/5 fx (26–40) | 11.5 (2–46) | 56% (1 yr), response rate 86.3% | Median 11 mo, 50% (1 yr) |
| Zhong, et al. | Total body gammaray stereotactic RT system | Salvage | 72 | Incomplete TACE → SBRT, ≥10 cm, ECOG≤2 | 12.6 (10.8–16.5) | 35.7 (33.8–39)/6 fx | 18 (4–70) | Response rate 79%, low incidence of recur (8%) | Median 11 mo, 38% (1 yr), 12% (3 yr), 3% (5 yr), significantly higher with tumor encapsulation (56%, 1yr) |
| Kuo, et al. | Cyberknife | Definitive/Salvage | ≤4 cm: 52, >4 to <10 cm: 355, ≥10 cm: 34 CP-A, CP-B≤7 | 1.8–18 | 26–40 Gy /3–5 fx for tumors >5 cm, 39 Gy/3 fx for tumors ≤5 cm | 16 (2–72) | Response rate 96%/91%/76% ( | 50%, 45%, 33% (3 yr) (no significant difference by size) | |
RT, radiotherapy; HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma; CP, Child-Pugh; EHM, extrahepatic metastasis; TACE, transarterial chemoembolization; PVT, portal vein thrombosis; RFA, radiofrequency ablation; SBRT, stereotactic body radiotherapy; 3D-CRT, three-dimensional conformal radiotherapy; IMRT, intensity-modulated radiotherapy; VMAT, volumetric modulated arc therapy; LN, lymph node; KPS, Karnofsky performance status; SD, stable disease; PR, partial response; PD, progressive disease; BCLC, Barcelona-Clinic Liver Cancer.