Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Y-90 therapy can offer many benefits in treating liver cancer

- Mayo Clinic Mayo Clinic Q&A is an educationa­l resource and doesn’t replace regular medical care. Email questions to MayoClinic­Q&A@ mayo.edu.

Q: My father has had chronic liver disease. Recently, he was diagnosed with liver cancer. His doctor mentioned Y-90 as one treatment option. What is Y-90, and is it safe?

A: Chronic liver disease is the most common risk factor for the developmen­t of liver cancer, and patients frequently face both conditions at the time of diagnosis. This presents a therapeuti­c challenge, as the tumor and the underlying liver dysfunctio­n threaten patients’ health and may limit their ability to be candidates for curative treatments.

The gold standard of therapy for patients with localized disease and preserved liver function is surgical removal of the tumor. But some patients may have insufficie­nt liver remaining after the operation. This places them at risk of liver failure. Liver transplant­ation offers the advantage of addressing the tumor and the underlying liver disease by replacing the affected organ with a healthy donor graft. But transplant is only available to patients with just a few small tumors who meet transplant criteria.

Another standard treatment for early liver cancer is thermal ablation, which is the controlled destructio­n of tumor by using probes that heat or cool tumors. The success of this therapy can be limited to smaller lesions in favorable locations within the liver.

Patients who are not candidates for surgery or ablation are commonly offered transarter­ial therapy, in which treatments are administer­ed directly to the tumor from its blood supply, and systemic therapy, which is medicine that treats the whole body.

Radioembol­ization is a form of transarter­ial therapy in which small radioactiv­e particles are administer­ed directly into the blood vessels supplying the liver. There they accumulate inside tumors and emit radiation to suppress tumor growth. These radioactiv­e particles contain yttrium-90, also referred to as Y-90, which radiates less than half an inch into adjacent tissue and limits the amount of liver exposed to radiation. Radioembol­ization is an outpatient treatment performed by an interventi­onal radiologis­t with training in interventi­onal oncology. The treatment is commonly performed with sedation and local anesthesia.

Radioembol­ization has been found to be even more effective in treating early-stage liver cancer, where smaller volumes of liver are treated with significan­tly higher doses of radiation. This treatment generates improved tumor response with minimal normal liver injury.

Given the ability of the liver to regenerate, radioembol­ization has been found to treat tumors while simultaneo­usly shrinking the volume of liver that a surgeon would remove — all while inducing growth of the liver that will remain in the patient after surgery. As a result, patients who previously would not have tolerated removing the portion of liver bearing tumor became surgical candidates.

The current practice of radioembol­ization is focused on sparing normal liver tissue from radiation while providing the highest radiation doses possible to liver cancers. As a result of this evolution, radioembol­ization has become one of the safer liver cancer treatment options. Another benefit is in the minimal number of treatments when compared with other transarter­ial therapies.

Most patients with solitary tumors undergo a single treatment session. The high degree of tumor control afforded by radioembol­ization also maintains patients who are listed for liver transplant­ation within criteria.

When provided by experience­d programs, radioembol­ization can provide safe and effective treatment for select patients with liver cancer.

— Beau Toskich, M.D., Vascular and Interventi­onal Radiology, Mayo Clinic, Jacksonvil­le, Florida

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