American Society of Clinical Oncology 2009 clinical evidence review on radiofrequency ablation of hepatic metastases from colorectal cancer Journal Article


Authors: Wong, S. L.; Mangu, P. B.; Choti, M. A.; Crocenzi, T. S.; Dodd, G. D.; Dorfman, G. S.; Eng, C.; Fong, Y. M.; Giusti, A. F.; Lu, D.; Marsland, T. A.; Michelson, R.; Poston, G. J.; Schrag, D.; Seidenfeld, J.; Benson, A.
Article Title: American Society of Clinical Oncology 2009 clinical evidence review on radiofrequency ablation of hepatic metastases from colorectal cancer
Abstract: Purpose To review the evidence about the efficacy and utility of radiofrequency ablation (RFA) for hepatic metastases from colorectal cancer (CRHM). Methods The American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) convened a panel to conduct and analyze a comprehensive systematic review of the RFA literature from Medline and the Cochrane Collaboration Library. Results Because data were considered insufficient to form the basis of a practice guideline, ASCO has instead published a clinical evidence review. The evidence is from single-arm, retrospective, and prospective trials. No randomized controlled trials have been included. The following three clinical issues were considered by the panel: the efficacy of surgical hepatic resection versus RFA for resectable tumors; the utility of RFA for unresectable tumors; and RFA approaches (open, laparoscopic, or percutaneous). Evidence suggests that hepatic resection improves overall survival (OS), particularly for patients with resectable tumors without extrahepatic disease. Careful patient and tumor selection is discussed at length in the literature. RFA investigators report a wide variability in the 5-year survival rate (14% to 55%) and local tumor recurrence rate (3.6% to 60%). The reported mortality rate was low (0% to 2%), and the major complications rate was commonly reported to be between 6% and 9%. RFA is currently performed with all three approaches. Conclusion There is a compelling need for more research to determine the efficacy and utility of RFA to increase local recurrence-free, progression-free, and disease-free survival as well as OS for patients with CRHM. Clinical trials have established that hepatic resection can improve OS for patients with resectable CRHM.
Keywords: long-term survival; positron-emission-tomography; risk-factors; surgical-treatment; liver-tumors; thermal ablation; unresectable; hepatobiliary malignancy; percutaneous ablation; carcinoma metastases; diaphragmatic injury
Journal Title: Journal of Clinical Oncology
Volume: 28
Issue: 3
ISSN: 0732-183X
Publisher: American Society of Clinical Oncology  
Date Published: 2010-01-20
Start Page: 493
End Page: 508
Language: English
ACCESSION: ISI:000273662700022
DOI: 10.1200/jco.2009.23.4450
PROVIDER: wos
PUBMED: 19841322
Notes: --- - Review - "Source: Wos"
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  1. Yuman Fong
    775 Fong