Definitive radiation therapy in bile duct carcinoma. 1988

J K Hayes, and M D Sapozink, and F J Miller
Department of Radiology, University of Utah Medical Center, Salt Lake City 84132.

Between 1980 and 1985, 24 patients with primary adenocarcinoma of the bile duct were treated with various combinations of surgery, biliary intubation, external irradiation, and transcatheter brachytherapy. Seventy-five percent of tumors were in the proximal bile ducts. Ten patients received no or only palliative radiation, Group 1, whereas 14 patients received definitive courses of radiation (4 by external beam irradiation, 2 by transcatheter irradiation, and 8 by both modalities), Group 2. Survival in Group 1 and Group 2 was significantly different (p less than 0.005) with median survivals of 2.0 and 12.8 months, respectively. This result may be in part due to differences in treatment and in part due to selection bias because the series is small, uncontrolled, and retrospective. Median survival of the 8 patients treated with combined modalities was 13.2 months (range 7.4-30.3) with 4 patients alive 8.7 to 16.2 months, 3 without cholangiographic evidence of disease. Complications of therapy were common, including bacterial sepsis (58%), cholangitis (38%), gastrointestinal bleeding (46%), intra or extrahepatic abscesses (33%), and recurrent biliary obstruction (25%). Cholangitis, hemorrhage, abscesses, and ulcers appeared more frequently in definitively treated patients, whereas recurrent biliary obstruction was absent in this group and frequent in Group 1. Differences in complication rates between groups were not statistically significant. Early diagnosis and management usually reversed a downhill clinical course in patients with abscess and hemorrhage. Both surgical and percutaneous techniques of biliary decompression, the usual initial form of therapy in bile duct cancer, are associated with frequent and serious complications. Although many of our complications may have derived from biliary decompression, it is possible that definitive treatment may have increased the frequency of serious complications.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D008297 Male Males
D008875 Middle Aged An adult aged 45 - 64 years. Middle Age
D011879 Radiotherapy Dosage The total amount of radiation absorbed by tissues as a result of radiotherapy. Dosage, Radiotherapy,Dosages, Radiotherapy,Radiotherapy Dosages
D011882 Radiotherapy, High-Energy Radiotherapy using high-energy (megavolt or higher) ionizing radiation. Types of radiation include gamma rays, produced by a radioisotope within a teletherapy unit; x-rays, electrons, protons, alpha particles (helium ions) and heavy charged ions, produced by particle acceleration; and neutrons and pi-mesons (pions), produced as secondary particles following bombardment of a target with a primary particle. Megavolt Radiotherapy,High-Energy Radiotherapy,Radiotherapy, Megavolt,High Energy Radiotherapy,Radiotherapy, High Energy
D001918 Brachytherapy A collective term for interstitial, intracavity, and surface radiotherapy. It uses small sealed or partly-sealed sources that may be placed on or near the body surface or within a natural body cavity or implanted directly into the tissues. Curietherapy,Implant Radiotherapy,Plaque Therapy, Radioisotope,Radioisotope Brachytherapy,Radiotherapy, Interstitial,Radiotherapy, Intracavity,Radiotherapy, Surface,Brachytherapy, Radioisotope,Interstitial Radiotherapy,Intracavity Radiotherapy,Radioisotope Plaque Therapy,Radiotherapy, Implant,Surface Radiotherapy,Therapy, Radioisotope Plaque
D002759 Adenoma, Bile Duct A benign tumor of the intrahepatic bile ducts. Cholangioma,Adenomas, Bile Duct,Bile Duct Adenoma,Bile Duct Adenomas,Cholangiomas
D005260 Female Females
D006801 Humans Members of the species Homo sapiens. Homo sapiens,Man (Taxonomy),Human,Man, Modern,Modern Man
D001650 Bile Duct Neoplasms Tumors or cancer of the BILE DUCTS. Bile Duct Cancer,Cancer of Bile Duct,Cancer of the Bile Duct,Neoplasms, Bile Duct,Bile Duct Cancers,Bile Duct Neoplasm,Cancer, Bile Duct,Cancers, Bile Duct,Neoplasm, Bile Duct

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