| Literature DB >> 31620633 |
Jongmoo Park1, Jae Won Park2, Min Kyu Kang1.
Abstract
Stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) is an advanced form of radiotherapy (RT) with a growing interest on its application in the treatment of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). It can deliver ablative radiation doses to tumors in a few fractions without excessive doses to normal tissues, with the help of advanced modern RT and imaging technologies. Currently, SBRT is recommended as an alternative to curative treatments, such as surgery and radiofrequency ablation. This review discusses the current status of SBRT to aid in the decision making on how it is incorporated into the HCC management.Entities:
Keywords: Hepatocellular carcinoma; Image-guided radiotherapy; Radiotherapy; Stereotactic body radiotherapy
Year: 2019 PMID: 31620633 PMCID: PMC6784649 DOI: 10.12701/yujm.2019.00269
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Yeungnam Univ J Med ISSN: 2384-0293
Fig. 1.An example of stereotactic body radiotherapy using tracking intensity-modulated beams for a 20-mm-sized lesion in segment 1 that occurred after right hepatectomy and 5 times of radiofrequency ablation. (A) Gold fiducial markers are inserted before the simulation for patient/tumor position verification and real-time tumor tracking. (B, C) Target volumes and normal tissues are delineated in breath-hold images, and then treatment plan using 9 intensity-modulated beams is generated (gross tumor volume in red, planning target volume in cyan, and the intestine in green). (D) In the treatment room, locations of fiducial markers are verified using cone-beam computed tomography. (E) The treatment beams are delivered while monitoring the movement of the fiducial markers in real time. Electronic portal imaging device shows the movement of each beamlet during tracking treatment. Images in B, C, and E are from this patient, and images in A and D are from other patients for demonstration.
Clinical uses of stereotactic body radiotherapy for hepatocellular carcinoma
| 1. Recommended by major guidelines for HCC management |
| - As an alternative to curative treatment options for single tumors or multiple small lesions with a limited number (BCLC stage 0-A) |
| 2. Based on small case series |
| - As a bridge therapy to prevent tumor progression or to downstage tumors into the Milan criteria |
| - As an adjuvant therapy after incomplete transarterial chemoembolization for large tumors (BCLC stage A) or multiple lesions (BCLC stage B) |
| - As palliative therapy to restore the portal flow and facilitate subsequent treatments in HCC with portal vein thrombosis (BCLC stage C) |
| 3. Promising |
| - In combination with immunotherapy with the potential to enhance local and systemic control |
HCC, hepatocelluar carcinoma; BCLC, Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer.