| Literature DB >> 31528090 |
Riccardo Inchingolo1, Alessandro Posa2, Martin Mariappan3, Stavros Spiliopoulos4.
Abstract
Liver cancers are the second most frequent cause of global cancer-related mortality of which 90% are attributable to hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Despite the advent of screening programmes for patients with known risk factors, a substantial number of patients are ineligible for curative surgery at presentation with limited outcomes achievable with systemic chemotherapy/external radiotherapy. This has led to the advent of numerous minimally invasive options including but not limited to trans-arterial chemoembolization, radiofrequency/microwave ablation and more recently selective internal radiation therapy many of which are often the first-line treatment for select stages of HCC or serve as a conduit to liver transplant. The authors aim to provide a comprehensive overview of these various image guided minimally invasive therapies with a brief focus on the technical aspects accompanied by a critical analysis of the literature to assess the most up-to-date evidence from comparative systematic reviews and meta-analyses finishing with an assessment of novel combination regimens and future directions of travel.Entities:
Keywords: Ablation; Cirrhosis; Hepatocellular carcinoma; Interventional oncology; Liver; Selective internal radiation therapy; Trans-arterial chemo embolization
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31528090 PMCID: PMC6718039 DOI: 10.3748/wjg.v25.i32.4614
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Gastroenterol ISSN: 1007-9327 Impact factor: 5.742
Codified locoregional treatments: Indications, advantages and disadvantages
| Ablation (RFA) | BCLC-A patients | Curative | Low complication rates rates in HCC > 3 cm |
| New devices (MWA, Cryoablation, HIFU, Laser, IRE) | Relatively unfeasible in “complex” sites/lesions | ||
| TACE | BCLC-B patients without PVT | Super-selective delivery | Palliative |
| Great variety of materials | Heterogeneous population | ||
| No standardization | |||
| Combined therapy (RFA + TACE) | Selected BCLC-A/B patients | Complimentary and sinergistic effect | No standardization |
| Better than RFA and TACE alone | |||
| SIRT | Selected BCLC-B/C patients not amenable for TACE or Sorafenib | Super-selective delivery | High costs |
HCC: Hepatocellular carcinoma; RFA: Radiofrequency ablation; MWA: Microwave ablation; IRE: Irreversible electroporation; TACE: Trans-arterial chemoembolization; SIRT: Selective internal radiation therapy.
Figure 1Drug Eluting Beads-Trans Arterial Chemo Embolization of 3 cm hepatocellular carcinoma. A: Gd-EOB- DTPA enhanced MR image of a 73 years old cirrhotic patient with a 3-cm exophytic liver nodule in segment VI (arrow), showing enhancement in the arterial phase; B: the nodule is hypointense in comparison to the surrounding liver parenchyma in coronal hepatobiliary phase, in keeping with HCC. C and D: Celiac axis DSA showing the hypervascular lesion (arrow); selective microcatheterization of the feeding vessel with infusion of doxorubicin-loaded drug-eluting beads (200 µm). E and F: 2-mo follow-up Gd-EOB- DTPA enhanced MR image demonstrating absence of arterial enhancement of the nodule and marked hypointensity in coronal hepatobiliary phase (arrow).
Figure 2US-guided radiofrequency ablation Radio-Frequency Ablation of hepatocellular carcinoma. A: Gd-EOB- DTPA enhanced MR image of a 57 years old cirrhotic patient with a 1.5-cm liver nodule in segment VIII (arrow), showing enhancement in the arterial phase, in keeping with HCC. B: US image demonstrating the RF needle, with a 3 cm exposed tip, crossing the lesion (arrow). C: 1-mo follow-up portal-venous phase Gd-EOB- DTPA enhanced MR image demonstrating the oval shaped ablation zone (arrow).
Figure 3Tc-99m Macro-Aggregates of albumin mapping procedure prior to Y-90 radioembolization. A: Selective common hepatic artery DSA following coil embolization of the gastroduodenal artery (arrow); and B: subsequent infusion of MAA with documentation of the exact position of the tip of the microcatheter at the right hepatic artery (arrow).