Stereotactic body radiation therapy for kidney cancer. Where do we stand?
Details
Publication Year 2023-05,Volume 30,Issue #5,Page 437-445
Journal Title
International Journal of Urology
Publication Type
Review
Abstract
At present, surgery is still the gold standard for the local treatment of renal cancer. Nonetheless, in several clinical scenarios, stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) also known as stereotactic ablative body radiotherapy (SABR) is emerging as a highly effective ablative technique in fragile patients and those with significant comorbidities, as well as in cases where percutaneous therapy (cryoablation or radiofrequency) is not viable. However, considering the intrinsic radioresistance of renal tumors, the optimal treatment schemes have not been established. In oligometastatic patients, it has been reported that the control of the oligometastases can be a potentially curable approach. Being a technique than can be administered exclusively or in combination with systemic therapy, treatment individualization based on patient characteristics is key. Another scenario under investigation is oligoprogression, where SBRT offers the possibility of delaying further lines of systemic therapy by eliminating subclones of resistant tumor with ablative doses, with the additional opportunity of stimulating the immune system (immunomodulatory role). In this review, we have conducted an analysis of recently published studies that test the role of this technique in different clinical scenarios of this disease. We have found promising results that make SBRT a potent therapeutic approach with low toxicity. We also comment on ongoing studies that will generate the necessary evidence needed for the implementation of this technique in our daily clinical practice.
Publisher
Wiley
Keywords
Humans; *Radiosurgery/adverse effects/methods; *Carcinoma, Renal Cell/radiotherapy/surgery; *Kidney Neoplasms/radiotherapy/surgery; Sbrt; kidney cancer; oligometastasis; radiotherapy; renal cell carcinoma; stereotactic body radiotherapy
Department(s)
Radiation Oncology
PubMed ID
36746747
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Creation Date: 2023-09-05 06:33:30
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