Carcinoma, Hepatocellular Clinical Trial
Official title:
Comparative Study Between Radiofrequency and Ethanol Injection for the Ablation of Small Hepatocellular Carcinoma Associated With Liver Cirrhosis
Ethanol injection has been for many years the standard approach as percutaneous treatment of non-surgical early hepatocellular carcinoma in cirrhotic patients. Radiofrequency ablation has been proposed as an alternative approach and some retrospective and prospective comparative trials indicated its better performance for the local control of the disease in comparison to ethanol injection. Some prospective randomized studies from Japan and from Taiwan reported also an increase of overall survival in the patients treated by Radiofrequency. Aim of this study is to compare the two techniques in a prospective randomized trial in western patients.
Currently early hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) complicating liver cirrhosis is often treated
by percutaneous ablation techniques under ultrasound guidance: their performance is easy,
safe and efficient. They are less invasive and expensive than surgical removal, representing
a potential local cure for a larger number of patients than those who could be treated by a
liver resection or offered a liver transplantation.
Percutaneous ethanol injection (PEI), the first non-surgical technique introduced in
clinical practice, has been widely used since the late eighties. PEI induces a chemical and
ischemic coagulative necrosis in 70-80% of small (<3cm) HCC lesions. Necrosis obtained by
this way is generally restricted to the neoplastic lesion itself; the chemical ablation may
be moreover hampered by internal scars, that limit the uniform spreading of ethanol and by
possible uncontrolled flows outside the lesion, with the ultimate result of a reduced
necrotic effect and persistence of residual vital nests of neoplasia in as many as 33% of
the cases. Nevertheless, the survival after PEI seems not different from surgery in
retrospective series and this technique was indicated as the standard percutaneous treatment
for early HCC in the 2001 guidelines of the European Association for the Study of the Liver
(EASL).
In 1993 radio-frequency ablation (RF) was proposed as a new technique for the ablation of
small HCCs. RF induces heat-generated coagulative necrosis of the neoplastic lesion and
surrounding liver tissue. However, RF is not suitable for lesions situated close to large
vessels or hollow viscera, as the first can decrease heat generation and the latter can be
damaged by the procedure itself; it is more cumbersome, needs anaesthesiology assistance in
most of the cases and, accordingly to early reports, is aggravated by a higher complication
rate and higher costs. A major advantage of RF is the achievement of complete ablation of
the neoplastic lesion with less sessions than PEI. This advantage impacts on the “quality of
life” of the patient, who prefers to be cured in a single session rather than by the
multisession approach of PEI.
When the present study began in January 2001, no randomised controlled trial comparing RF
and PEI had been published and no data were available on mid-long term local tumor
progression and on comparative survival rate after either treatment. Some retrospective
studies about the primary effectiveness had been published.
The aim of our study was to compare the effectiveness of RF versus PEI in a randomised
controlled trial: our primary end point was to evaluate the local control (sustained
complete response) after 1 year from the treatment of every lesion defined as HCC in the
single patient at the beginning of the trial; secondary end points included the primary
effectiveness (early complete response)of the treatment after 1-2 months,the overall
survival at four years, the complication rate, and the costs.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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