Sindelar W F, Kinsella T J
Surgery Branch, National Cancer Institute, National Institute of Health, Bethesda, MD, USA.
Ann Oncol. 1999;10 Suppl 4:226-30.
Intraoperative radiotherapy (IORT) involves the administration of therapeutic radiation to malignancies during surgical procedures. IORT permits high dose delivery to tumors with the simultaneous reduction of radiation exposure to normal tissues, which may be directly shielded or operatively mobilized from the treatment volume. IORT has been investigated in various intra-abdominal malignancies, including carcinoma of the pancreas. Techniques of IORT were initially developed in Japan during the 1970's. Reports of therapeutic benefit in some patients with unresectable pancreatic cancer encouraged further examinations by various institutions in the United States. Experiences at the Massachusetts General Hospital in the early 1980's suggested that IORT enhanced survival in selected patients with locally advanced but non-metastatic disease. However, subsequent investigations studies by a variety of institutions, including the Mayo Clinic, failed to establish any conclusive evidence that IORT significantly prolonged the survival enhancement of unresectable pancreatic cancer patients. A prospective multi-institutional study carried out by the Radiation Therapy Oncology Group (RTOG) showed an 8-month median survival, similar to conventional therapy and indicating that IORT failed to prolong survival. However, the RTOG did show that IORT rapidly and consistently palliated the severe viseral pain which often accompanied pancreatic cancer. By 1990, some institutions had explored IORT as an adjunct to pancreatectomy, in patients with resectable tumors. Studies typically involved highly selected uncontrolled patients but did suggest that IORT could enhance local disease control and, in some cases, overall survival, when performed in conjunction with pancreatic resection. IORT appeared to be most conspicuously beneficial when used with extended radical resections. A small prospectively randomized trial conducted at the National Cancer Institute showed significant improvement in local disease control in patients receiving IORT compared with patients receiving conventional external beam postoperative radiotherapy after resection. Current evidence suggests that IORT may have an important palliative role in patients with unresectable pancreatic cancers, ameliorating visceral pain and promoting local control of the primary tumor; however, IORT appears to have no significant effect on overall survival. For patients with resectable disease, especially patients with locally extensive tumor, IORT appears to have benefit in enhancing disease control and in some cases survival. It is reasonable to further explore the potential role of IORT in pancreatic cancer, especially as a component of multimodal therapy, since IORT's demonstrated enhancement of local control could be an important factor in eventual disease control.
术中放疗(IORT)是指在外科手术过程中对恶性肿瘤进行治疗性放疗。IORT能够在减少正常组织受辐射量的同时,对肿瘤给予高剂量照射,正常组织可直接屏蔽或通过手术移出治疗区域。IORT已在包括胰腺癌在内的各种腹部恶性肿瘤中进行了研究。IORT技术最初于20世纪70年代在日本开发。一些不可切除胰腺癌患者的治疗效果报告促使美国各机构进一步开展研究。20世纪80年代初,麻省总医院的经验表明,IORT可提高部分局部晚期但无转移疾病患者的生存率。然而,包括梅奥诊所在内的多个机构随后的研究未能确定任何确凿证据表明IORT能显著延长不可切除胰腺癌患者的生存时间。放射治疗肿瘤学组(RTOG)进行的一项前瞻性多机构研究显示,中位生存期为8个月,与传统治疗相似,表明IORT未能延长生存期。然而,RTOG确实表明IORT能迅速且持续地缓解胰腺癌常伴随的严重内脏疼痛。到1990年,一些机构已探索将IORT作为可切除肿瘤患者胰腺切除术的辅助治疗。研究通常涉及高度选择的非对照患者,但确实表明IORT与胰腺切除联合应用时,可增强局部疾病控制,在某些情况下还可提高总生存率。与扩大根治性切除术联合使用时,IORT的益处似乎最为显著。美国国立癌症研究所进行的一项小型前瞻性随机试验表明,与接受传统外照射术后放疗的患者相比,接受IORT的患者局部疾病控制有显著改善。目前的证据表明,IORT可能在不可切除胰腺癌患者中具有重要的姑息治疗作用,可缓解内脏疼痛并促进原发肿瘤的局部控制;然而,IORT似乎对总生存期无显著影响。对于可切除疾病的患者,尤其是局部肿瘤广泛的患者,IORT似乎在增强疾病控制以及在某些情况下提高生存率方面具有益处。进一步探索IORT在胰腺癌中的潜在作用是合理的,特别是作为多模式治疗的一部分,因为IORT已证明的局部控制增强可能是最终疾病控制的重要因素。