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Thermal ablation of colorectal liver metastases: a position paper by an international panel of ablation experts, the interventional oncology sans frontières meeting 2013

Authors :
Riad Salem
Thomas Helmberger
Reto Bale
Ping Liang
Philippe L. Pereira
Damian E. Dupuy
Brad Wood
Riccardo Lencioni
Thomas J. Vogl
Afshin Gangi
Stephen B. Solomon
Luigi Solbiati
Alice Gillams
Matthew R. Callstrom
Franca Meloni
Constantinos T. Sofocleous
Nahum Goldberg
David S.K. Lu
Debra A. Gervais
Muneeb Ahmed
Thierry de Baere
Tito Livraghi
David J. Breen
Min-hua Chen
Hyunchul Rhim
Fred T. Lee
Fabio Piscaglia
Ernst Michael Jung
Byung Ihn Choi
Michael C. Soulen
Masatoshi Tanaka
Gillams, Alice
Goldberg, Nahum
Ahmed, Muneeb
Bale, Reto
Breen, David
Callstrom, Matthew
Chen, Min Hua
Choi, Byung Ihn
de Baere, Thierry
Dupuy, Damian
Gangi, Afshin
Gervais, Debra
Helmberger, Thoma
Jung, Ernst-Michael
Lee, Fred
Lencioni, Riccardo
Liang, Ping
Livraghi, Tito
Lu, David
Meloni, Franca
Pereira, Philippe
Piscaglia, Fabio
Rhim, Hyunchul
Salem, Riad
Sofocleous, Constantino
Solomon, Stephen B.
Soulen, Michael
Tanaka, Masatoshi
Vogl, Thoma
Wood, Brad
Solbiati, Luigi
Source :
European radiology, vol 25, iss 12, European Radiology
Publisher :
Springer Nature

Abstract

Objectives: Previous attempts at meta-analysis and systematic review have not provided clear recommendations for the clinical application of thermal ablation in metastatic colorectal cancer. Many authors believe that the probability of gathering randomised controlled trial (RCT) data is low. Our aim is to provide a consensus document making recommendations on the appropriate application of thermal ablation in patients with colorectal liver metastases. Methods: This consensus paper was discussed by an expert panel at The Interventional Oncology Sans Frontières 2013. A literature review was presented. Tumour characteristics, ablation technique and different clinical applications were considered and the level of consensus was documented. Results: Specific recommendations are made with regard to metastasis size, number, and location and ablation technique. Mean 31 % 5-year survival post-ablation in selected patients has resulted in acceptance of this therapy for those with technically inoperable but limited liver disease and those with limited liver reserve or co-morbidities that render them inoperable. Conclusions: In the absence of RCT data, it is our aim that this consensus document will facilitate judicious selection of the patients most likely to benefit from thermal ablation and provide a unified interventional oncological perspective for the use of this technology. Key Points: • Best results require due consideration of tumour size, number, volume and location. • Ablation technology, imaging guidance and intra-procedural imaging assessment must be optimised. • Accepted applications include inoperable disease due to tumour distribution or inadequate liver reserve. • Other current indications include concurrent co-morbidity, patient choice and the test-of-time approach. • Future applications may include resectable disease, e.g. for small solitary tumours.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09387994
Volume :
25
Issue :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Radiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7ba26e78d72b16e49610ddfd7d7b468b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00330-015-3779-z