Publications (2)4.68 Total impact
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Article: MR-guided laser-induced thermotherapy (LITT) of liver tumours: experimental and clinical data.
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ABSTRACT: MR-guided laser-induced interstitial thermotherapy (LITT) is a percutaneous, minimally invasive treatment modality for treating liver lesions/metastases, soft tissue tumours and musculoskeletal lesions. In this group, MR-guided LITT is currently performed under local anaesthesia on an out-patient basis with a specially designed saline-cooled laser application system. Nd:YAG laser (1064 nm wave length) was used for tumour ablation. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) using both open and closed MR units has proven clinically effective in validating the exact positioning of optical fibres. It also allows for real time-monitoring of thermal effects and the evaluation of treatment-induced coagulation necrosis. In liver tumours, percutaneous MR-guided LITT achieves a local tumour control rate of 98.7% at 3 months post-therapy and 97.3% at 6 months with metastases smaller than 5 cm in diameter. The mean survival rate for 1259 patients with 3440 metastases treated with 14 694 laser applications at the institute (calculated with the Kaplan-Meier method) was 4.4 years (95% confidence interval: 4.1-4.8 years) and median survival was 3.00 years. No statistically significant difference in survival rates was observed in patients with liver metastases from colorectal cancer vs metastases from other primary tumours. The rate of clinically relevant side effects and complications requiring secondary treatment was 2.2%. The clinical use of MR guided LITT (size < 5 cm, number < 5) is justified in patients with liver metastases of colorectal and/or breast cancers if the inclusion criteria are carefully observed. Further indications for MR guided LITT include recurrent cancer lesions in the head and neck, lung metastases and bone and soft tissue lesions.International Journal of Hyperthermia 12/2004; 20(7):713-24. · 1.92 Impact Factor -
Article: [Transarterial chemoembolization of liver metastases: Indication, technique, results].
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ABSTRACT: We have analyzed the effectiveness of repetitive transarterial chemoembolization (TACE) of liver metastases as a neoadjuvant or palliative treatment modality in comparison with published data. Chemoembolization of liver metastases is performed with different cytotoxic drugs. In a 4-week interval, 357 patients were treated with repetitive 1,158 TACE courses performed with lipiodol, mitomycin C and spherex. 254 patients were treated palliatively, 18 patients symptomatically and 79 patients via the neoadjuvant protocol, 71 patients of whom received additional MR-guided laser-induced thermoablation (LITT) of the metastases after TACE. Our results were compared with the literature. Most of the patients with a low rate of local complications like vascular occlusion or liver abscess could be treated successfully using TACE. In 81 % of the treated lesions a primary high lipiodol retention was observed. In the palliative group a reduction of the tumor size was noted in 36 % of the lesions, a growth stop in 24 % and a reduction of the tumor growth rate in 40 %. In 70 % of the patients treated neodadjuvantly a reduction of the tumor size was found. The median survival rate of our collective of patients with liver metastases averages 8.6 months. In the literature median survival rates in patients with liver metastases were between 8.5 and 23 months after TACE. TACE is judged as a minimal invasive and outpatient treatment protocol for liver metastases. A combination of TACE and different local treatment modalities presents a neoadjuvant treatment strategy to control the diseased liver.RöFo - Fortschritte auf dem Gebiet der R 07/2002; 174(6):675-83. · 2.76 Impact Factor
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Institutions
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2004
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Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main
- Institut für Diagnostische und Interventionelle Radiologie
Frankfurt am Main, Hesse, Germany
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