Affiliation:
1. Department of Surgery, Lund University, Lund, Sweden
2. Department of Surgery, Lund University, Lund 22185, Sweden
Abstract
For treatment of malignancies, physical and metabolic differences between tumour cells and host cells
have guided the development of new approaches. In this review, two new approaches to be used in the
treatment of liver malignancies are outlined: ischaemic therapy and interferences with the glucose
metabolism. Ischaemic therapy of liver malignancies has been used in different forms during the last 20
years: from ligation of the hepatic artery, embolization of the arterial tree, transient occlusion of the
hepatic artery to the present day use of temporary, intermittent, transient hepatic arterial occlusion. The
beneficial effect of ischaemic therapy on malignancies is supposed to depend on oxygen and nutritional
deficiency, formation of oxygen-derived free radicals and loss of function in cellular enzymes. The tumour
cells seem thereby to be more sensitive than the host cells. Also, ischaemia might potentiate the effect of
cytotoxic drugs. Intereferencies with glucose metabolism might be directed either towards the
exaggerated tumour glycolysis, for example by glucose analogues like 2-deoxy-glucose, or towards the
exaggerated host gluconeogenesis, for example by hydrazine sulphate. These treatments result in
reduction of the glucose availability in the intracellular glucose metabolism in the tumour cells and have
experimentally been demonstrated to be correlated to reduced tumour growth. It is concluded that both
these approaches, ischaemic therapy and manipulations with the glucose metabolism, seem promising for
the future. What is needed now is research to clarify the mechanims behind the effects, to establish their
full consequences, and to identify the clinical use of these treatments and their possible combinations.
Cited by
5 articles.
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