Place de la radiothérapie stéréotaxique dans la prise en charge des tumeurs hépatiques

Translated title of the contribution: Stereotactic body radiation therapy in the management of liver tumours

J. Jacob, F. Nguyen, Deutsch, F. Mornex

    Research output: Contribution to journalShort surveypeer-review

    6 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Stereotactic radiotherapy is a high-precision technique based on the administration of high doses to a limited target volume. This treatment constitutes a therapeutic progress in the management of many tumours, especially hepatic ones. If surgery remains the standard local therapy, stereotactic radiotherapy is first dedicated to inoperable patients or unresectable tumours. Patients with moderately altered general status, preserved liver function and tumour lesions limited in number as in size are eligible to this technique. Results in terms of local control are satisfying, regarding primary tumours (notably hepatocellular carcinomas) as metastases stemming from various origins. If treatment protocols and follow-up modalities are not standardized to this day, iconographic acquisition using four-dimensional computed tomography, target volumes delineation based on morphological and/or metabolic data, and image-guided radiotherapy contribute to an oncologic efficacy and an improved sparing of the functional liver. The purpose of this literature review is to report the results of the main works having assessed stereotactic radiotherapy in the management of primary and secondary liver tumours. Technical particularities of this radiation modality will also be described.

    Translated title of the contributionStereotactic body radiation therapy in the management of liver tumours
    Original languageFrench
    Pages (from-to)486-494
    Number of pages9
    JournalCancer/Radiotherapie
    Volume18
    Issue number5-6
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1 Oct 2014

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