Radiofrequency or microwave ablation are non-surgical minimally invasive treatments that kill abnormal tissue in cancer patients while sparing healthy tissue. The procedures are performed by Holy Name Medical Center's Interventional Radiologists, who use X-ray imaging to guide a needle into the tumor.
Radiofrequency ablation transmits electrical currents while microwave ablation sends microwave energy from the needle into the target tissues, creating heat and killing the tumor. They may be used in the treatment of bone, kidney, liver, adrenal and lung cancers and have been shown to reduce bone pain in metastatic disease in more than 90 percent of patients who were not suitable for conventional therapy.
The two types of procedures typically do not cause serious side effects so patients can normally resume their daily activities within a few days. They are often used when surgery isn't an option.
Removing liver tumors with surgery is the best chance for a cure, but they are often inoperable because of the large size or location. At times, many small tumors may have spread throughout the liver making surgery ineffective.
As a result, Holy Name Medical Center's Interventional Radiologists may use minimally invasive procedures such as radioembolization and chemoembolization to treat liver tumors.
Radioembolization cuts off the blood supply to tumors while killing malignant cells. The procedure involves using a catheter to place millions of microspheres - minute particles that emit radiation - into the blood vessels feeding the tumor. The tiny beads become trapped in the vessel, cutting off the blood supply to the tumor while emitting radiation that kills the tumor cells.
This treatment is palliative, not curative, but benefits patients by extending and improving the quality of their lives. It is effective in treating primary and metastatic liver cancers and is performed as an outpatient procedure. There are fewer side effects - mainly fatigue that lasts seven to 10 days - compared to standard cancer treatments.
Recent studies have shown that patients with colon cancer that spread to the liver and were treated with radioembolization and chemotherapy lived 20 months longer than those treated with chemotherapy alone.
Chemoembolization is a procedure that involves delivering a high dose of a chemotherapy drug directly into the liver while shutting off the arteries supplying the blood that feeds the tumor. Interventional radiologists guide a catheter carrying the chemotherapy medication directly into the artery feeding the tumor.
Chemoembolization and radioembolization are often used in combination with radiofrequency ablation and other treatments.