2018
DOI: 10.1055/s-0038-1676098
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Radiation Therapy in HCC: What Data Exist and What Data Do We Need to Incorporate into Guidelines?

Abstract: Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a complex and diverse disease, with choice of treatment dependent on a patient's disease burden, location of disease, underlying liver function, and performance status. While radiation therapy (RT) was historically omitted from treatment algorithms, immense technological advances over the past several decades have enabled introduction of RT as an effective and safe treatment option for patients with HCC. Growing prospective and retrospective evidence supports the use of RT, pa… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…However, most international guidelines still do not recommend ERT to treat HCC with few exceptions due to the severe hepatotoxicity of the normal tissues after absorbing radiation more than 35 Gy. Since the early 1990s, radiotherapy (RT) has experienced tremendous technological advancements to develop IRT, which can precisely deliver very high tumoricidal dose to the tumor while preserving normal liver parenchyma ( 50 ). According to the pharmacokinetics of radionuclides, IRT can be properly indicated in HCC accompanied by PVTT with the OS reaching more than 20 months ( 51 ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, most international guidelines still do not recommend ERT to treat HCC with few exceptions due to the severe hepatotoxicity of the normal tissues after absorbing radiation more than 35 Gy. Since the early 1990s, radiotherapy (RT) has experienced tremendous technological advancements to develop IRT, which can precisely deliver very high tumoricidal dose to the tumor while preserving normal liver parenchyma ( 50 ). According to the pharmacokinetics of radionuclides, IRT can be properly indicated in HCC accompanied by PVTT with the OS reaching more than 20 months ( 51 ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Also, local radiation to the liver was applied. There are no large random-ized studies regarding radiotherapy for the treatment of HCC [12]. For this reason, radiation is not highly ranked in current clinical practice guidelines [13].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…SBRT delivers focused radiation under image guidance sparing large portions of the liver while providing ablative potential within the tumor, achieving local HCC control rates around 90% and similar survival compared to TACE and radiofrequency ablation. [ 50 , 61 , 62 ] Similar to that seen in the resection and LT literature, factors influencing post-LRT recurrence and overall survival include tumor number and size, AFP, liver dysfunction (e.g. bilirubin, albumin, Child–Pugh score), and vascular invasion.…”
Section: Models To Predict Hcc Recurrencementioning
confidence: 96%