abstract
BACKGROUND:
The
purpose of this review is to demonstrate the clinical indications,
technical developments, and outcome of liver-directed therapies in
interventional oncology of non-colorectal liver metastases.
METHODS:
Liver-directed
therapies are classified into vascular transarterial techniques such as
chemoperfusion (TACP), chemoembolization (TACE), radioembolization
(selective internal radiation therapy (SIRT)), and chemosaturation, as
well as thermal ablation techniques like microwave ablation (MWA),
radiofrequency ablation (RFA), laser-induced thermotherapy (LITT),
cryotherapy, and irreversible electroporation (IRE). The authors
searched the database PubMed using the following terms: 'image-guided
tumor ablation', 'thermal ablation therapies', 'liver metastases of
uveal melanoma', 'neuroendocrine carcinoma', 'breast cancer', and 'non-colorectal liver metastases'.
RESULTS:
Various
combinations of the above-mentioned therapy protocols are possible. In
neuroendocrine carcinomas, oligonodular liver metastases are treated
successfully via thermal ablation like RFA, LITT, or MWA, and diffuse
involvement via TACE or SIRT. Although liver involvement in breast cancer
is a systemic disease, non-responding nodular metastases can be
controlled via RFA or LITT. In ocular or cutaneous melanoma, thermal
ablation is rarely considered as an interventional treatment option, as
opposed to TACE, SIRT, or chemosaturation. Rarely liver-directed
therapies are used in pancreatic cancer,
most likely due to problems such as biliary digestive communications
after surgery and the risk of infections. Rare indications for thermal
ablation are liver metastases of other primary cancers like non-small
cell lung, gastric, and ovarian cancer.
CONCLUSION:
Interventional oncological techniques play a role in patients with liver-dominant metastases.
0 comments :
Post a Comment
Your comments?
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.