1. Ablative therapies of the biliary tree
- Author
-
Prashant Kedia, Paul R. Tarnasky, and Elizabeth S. John
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Hepatology ,Radiofrequency ablation ,business.industry ,Gastroenterology ,Review Article ,Biliary Stenting ,Malignancy ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,law.invention ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Ablative case ,medicine ,Prospective cohort study ,business ,Survival rate ,Intraluminal brachytherapy - Abstract
Cholangiocarcinoma, a malignancy of the epithelial cells in the intrahepatic or extrahepatic biliary tree, is often diagnosed at later stages. Median survival duration ranges from 3 to 9 months with a less than ten percent 5-year survival rate. Thus, often treatment strategies are aimed more towards palliation instead of cure. With the majority of patients presenting with unresectable disease at the time of diagnosis, surgical intervention is not feasible, making less invasive endoscopic therapies more suitable. Initially, biliary stents were utilized for biliary decompression to mitigate cholestatic symptoms and prevent cholangitis; however, this strategy did not prove to provide significant survival benefit. Therefore, efforts to treat the tumor burden itself in addition to maintaining biliary patency became a focus of innovation and research in the endoscopic field. This study has led to the advent of therapies such as photodynamic therapy, radiofrequency ablation, and intraluminal brachytherapy. These options combined with biliary stenting have shown to not only offer the benefit of biliary decompression, but also to potentially improve stent patency and survival. Further, there is an anti-tumor effect of each of these modalities, portending an additional benefit in this subset of patients. Despite numerous retrospective and prospective studies assessing these ablative therapies, there is still a paucity of appropriately powered randomized controlled trials, and further research has yet to be done in the field. This review details the current literature entailing endobiliary ablative strategies.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF