TheraSphere & Treatment of Unresectable Primary or Unresectable Secondary Liver Cancer
Liver, Cancer of, Non-Resectable
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Liver, Cancer of, Non-Resectable
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Patients over 18 years of age, of any race or sex, who have hepatocellular carcinoma of the liver, and who are able to give informed consent, will be eligible. Patients must have an ECOG Performance Status score of ≤ 2, with a life expectancy of ≥ 3 months, non-pregnant with an acceptable contraception in premenopausal women. Patients must be >4 weeks since prior radiation or prior surgery and at least 1 month post chemotherapy.
Exclusion Criteria:
Contraindications to angiography and selective visceral catheterization
- Evidence of potential delivery of greater than 16.5 mCi (30 Gy absorbed dose) per treatment of radiation to the lungs
- Evidence of any detectable Tc-99m MAA flow to the stomach or duodenum, after application of established angiographic techniques to stop or mitigate such flow (eg, placing catheter distal to gastric vessels)
- Significant extrahepatic disease representing an imminent life-threatening outcome
- Severe liver dysfunction or pulmonary insufficiency
- Active uncontrolled infection
- Significant underlying medical or psychiatric illness
- Pregnancy
Patients will be excluded: if they have pre-existing diarrhea/illness, or if they have a co-morbid disease or condition that would preclude safe delivery of TheraSphere® treatment and place the patient at undue risk.
Sites / Locations
- The Liver Institute at Methodist Dallas Medical Center
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Other
TheraShere in treatment of primary & secondary liver carcinoma
TheraSphere® is delivered into the liver tumor through a catheter placed into the hepatic artery. The hepatic artery provides the main blood supply to the tumor in the liver, whereas the portal vein supplies blood to normal liver parenchyma. TheraSphere® is embolized within the tumor and exerts a local beta radiation radiotherapeutic effect with a relatively limited concurrent injury to surrounding normal tissue.