An update on locoregional percutaneous treatment technologies in colorectal cancer liver metastatic disease
- PMID: 36825337
- DOI: 10.1080/17434440.2023.2185137
An update on locoregional percutaneous treatment technologies in colorectal cancer liver metastatic disease
Abstract
Introduction: Liver-dominant metastatic colorectal cancer is noted in approximately 20%-35% of the patients. Systemic chemotherapy remains the first-line treatment for mCRC, but the prognosis is poor due to liver failure. Novel minimally invasive technologies have enabled the optimization of locoregional treatment options.
Areas covered: This is a comprehensive review of novel locoregional treatment technologies, both percutaneous ablation and transcatheter arterial treatments, which can be used to decrease hepatic disease progression in patients with mCRC. Trans-arterial radioembolization is the most recently developed locoregional treatment for metastatic liver disease, and robust evidence has been accumulated over the past years.
Expert opinion: Image-guided techniques, endovascular and ablative, have gained wide acceptance for the treatment of liver malignancies, in selected patients with non-resectable disease. The optimization of dosimetry and microsphere technological advancement will certainly upgrade the role of liver radioembolization segmentectomy or lobectomy in the upcoming years, due to its curative intent. Also, ablative interventions provide local curative intent, offering significant and sustained local tumor control. Standardization protocols in terms of predictability and reliability using immediate treatment assessment and ablation zone software could further ameliorate clinical outcomes.
Keywords: Colorectal liver metastasis; ablation; chemoembolization; internal radiation therapy; interventional oncology; locoregional percutaneous therapy.
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical
Miscellaneous