Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2118287 | Cancer/Radiothérapie | 2011 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
Liver metastases are frequently found in oncologic patients. Chemotherapy is the standard treatment in plurimetastatic patients, with the possibility to obtain a clear improvement of their prognosis. Local treatment (surgery, radiofrequency, cryotherapy, radiotherapy, etc.) could be proposed for oligometastatic patients, particularly for those with a good prognosis. Historically, radiation therapy has had a limited role in the treatment of liver metastases because of its toxicity when whole liver irradiation was delivered. Improvements in the knowledge of liver radiobiology and radiopathology as well as technical innovations in delivering radiation therapy are the basis of the modern partial liver irradiation concept. In this historical and therapeutic landscape, extracranial stereotactic radiation therapy is particularly interesting for the treatment of liver metastases. This review summarises published data on stereotactic radiotherapy for the treatment of liver metastases.
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Authors
B. De Bari, M. Guillet, F. Mornex,