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Transcatheter arterial chemoembolization (TACE) is a widely accepted palliative therapy for the treatment of HCC. Palliative means that it does not cure the disease prolongs your life and improves quality of life. During TACE, a mixture of chemotherapy drugs is combined with an oil called lipiodol. Lipiodol has a role as both drug carrier and embolic agent (a material that blocks blood flow to tumors). The lipiodol/chemotherapy mixture is injected into an artery (blood vessel) directly supplying blood to a HCC tumor.
Lipiodol is made up of fat and water which can be seen on MRI. Therefore, MRI can be used to quantify the amount of lipiodol delivered to the HCC tumors.
In this study, the investigators want to see if patient survival is related to the amount of lipiodol delivered to HCC tumors.
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Inclusion criteria
Prospective studies will be performed in 20 patients with Hepatocellular Carcinoma (HCC) independently scheduled to undergo TACE; tumors in each of these candidates will already have been deemed un-resectable.
Reasons may include
Diagnosis of HCC will have been established by a) biopsy or b) non-invasively, based upon > 2cm diameter tumor with characteristic imaging findings in the setting of cirrhosis.
Male or female aged 18 to 89 years, all ethnicities
Exclusion criteria
23 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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