| Literature DB >> 32655266 |
Zhen-Guo Liu1, Xin-Hua Chen2, Zu-Jiang Yu1, Jun Lv1, Zhi-Gang Ren1.
Abstract
The number of liver cancer patients is likely to continue to increase in the coming decades due to the aging of the population and changing risk factors. Traditional treatments cannot meet the needs of all patients. New treatment methods evolved from pulsed electric field ablation are expected to lead to breakthroughs in the treatment of liver cancer. This paper reviews the safety and efficacy of irreversible electroporation in clinical studies, the methods to detect and evaluate its ablation effect, the improvements in equipment and its antitumor effect, and animal and clinical trials on electrochemotherapy. We also summarize studies on the most novel nanosecond pulsed electric field ablation techniques in vitro and in vivo. These research results are certain to promote the progress of pulsed electric field in the treatment of liver cancer. ©The Author(s) 2020. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: Ablation treatment; Electrochemotherapy; Hepatocellular carcinoma; Irreversible electroporation; Nanosecond pulsed electric fields; Pulsed electric field
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32655266 PMCID: PMC7327785 DOI: 10.3748/wjg.v26.i24.3421
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Gastroenterol ISSN: 1007-9327 Impact factor: 5.742
Figure 1The basic principle of tumor ablation by pulsed electric fields. A: The pattern of IRE ablation of liver cancer (white cones represent electrodes, and gray sphere represents liver cancer cells); B: The pattern of electrochemotherapy ablation of liver cancer (white cones represent electrodes, gray sphere represents liver cancer cells, and small particles at the top represent chemotherapy drugs); C: The pattern of nanosecond pulsed electric field ablation of liver cancer (white cones represent electrodes, and gray irregular mass represents liver cancer cells).
Summary of major irreversible electroporation trials for liver cancer
| Kalra et al[ | Retrospective study | 21 (21) | 21 HCC | 26 (14-40) | 100% | 42.9% No major complications | 24% |
| Mafeld et al[ | Bi-institutional retrospective study | 52 (59) | 20 HCC; 3 cholangiocellular carcinoma; 33 metastatic disease | 24 (7-52) | 75% | 17% | Not reported |
| Sugimoto et al[ | Prospective study | 5 (6) | 6 HCC | 17.5 (11.2-23.8) | 83% | No serious complications | Not reported |
| Distelmaier et al[ | Longitudinal observational diagnostic study | 29 (43) | 4 HCC; 39 others | 6.4 (mL) | 93% | Needle tract seeding in 26%, local heating to bile ducts in 24% | 5% |
| Sutter et al[ | Retrospective single-center study | 58 (75) | 75 HCC | 24 (6-90) | 77.3% (the first time); 89.35 (the second time); 92% (the third time) | 19% | Not reported |
| Frühling et al[ | Single-center nonrandomized clinical study | 30 (38) | 23 CRLM; 8 HCC; 7 others | 24 (0.8–4.0) | 78.9% at 3 mo; 65.8% at 6 mo | 20.0% minor, 3.3% major complications | 21.1% at 3 mo; 34.2% at 6 mo |
| Niessen et al[ | Prospective, single-center study | 34 (65) | 33 HCC; 22 CRLM; 10 others | 24 ± 14 (2-71) | 94.5% | 15.71% minor, 11.79% major complication | 13.84% |
| Eller et al[ | Prospective study | 14 (18) | 5 HCC; 11 CRLM; 2 others | 20 (11-37) | 86% | 29% | 17% |
| Cannon et al[ | Prospective study | 44 (48) | 14 HCC; 20 CRLM; 10 others | HCC 2.1 (1.3–4.5); CRLM 2.7 (1.2–11); other 2.5 (1.1–5.0) | 100% | 11.36% (with all complications resolving within 30 d) | Not reported |
CRLM: Colorectal liver metastasis; HCC: Hepatocellular carcinoma.