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You might have chemotherapy to relieve the symptoms of your cancer. The drugs that seem to be most effective for liver cancer are:

  • Adriamycin® (doxorubicin) - Doxorubicin hydrochloride is an anthracycline antibiotic. Doxorubicin stops the growth of cancer cells, causing them to die. This drug is given by a shot in a vein over about 15 minutes. The dose and how often you get the medicine depend on your size, your blood counts, how well your liver works, and the type of cancer you have.
  • Adrucil® or Efudex® (5-fluorouracil or 5-FU) - 5-FU is an antimetabolite drug. 5-FU prevents cells from making DNA and RNA, which stops cells from growing. 5-FU is given as a shot in the vein over 5 to 10 minutes or 20 to 60 minutes, or continuously over 22 to 24 hours for 1 to 4 days or longer. The treatment can be repeated every week, every other week, or every 3 weeks. The dose depends on your size.
  • FUDR® (floxuridine) - Floxuridine is an antimetabolite drug. It stops cancer cells from growing, which kills them. Floxuridine is delivered by a pump into the hepatic artery. It is usually given continuously over 14 to 21 days. The dose depends on your size.
  • Platinol® (cisplatin) - Cisplatin is a platinum compound chemotherapy drug that acts like an alkylating agent. It stops cancer cells from growing, which kills them. Cisplatin is given by an injection into the vein over at least 1 hour. Your dose depends on the type of cancer you have, your size, and how well your kidneys work.

Regional chemotherapy is the most common way to deliver chemotherapy drugs for liver cancer. Other techniques are systemic chemotherapy and a newer technique: chemoembolization.
  • Systemic chemotherapy - Systemic chemotherapy affects the entire body. You take systematic chemotherapy drugs in pill form or by injection into the vein. Because they affect normal cells and cancer cells, these drugs often cause side effects, such as nausea, loss of hair, and fatigue. These side effects usually stop when you complete the chemotherapy treatment.
  • Regional (intra-arterial) chemotherapy - The doctor makes an incision under the ribs and places a small pump under the skin. The pump injects chemotherapy drugs into a thin tube that is placed in the hepatic artery, delivers oxygen-rich blood from the heart to the liver. This technique allows the doctor to deliver a much higher dose of chemotherapy directly into the liver with fewer side effects. FUDR is the most commonly used drug for regional chemotherapy treatment of liver cancer.
  • Chemoembolization - The doctor threads a catheter (thin, flexible tube) into an artery in the inner thigh and up into the hepatic artery, which delivers oxygen-rich blood that tumors need to survive. The doctor then injects a dye into the bloodstream and watches the dye move up the catheter through angiography, an x-ray procedure used to look at blood vessels. When the catheter reaches the liver, the doctor injects small particles containing chemotherapy into the hepatic artery. The particles block the flow of blood to the liver through the hepatic artery. Once the blood stops flowing, the tumor is soaked in a high concentration of chemotherapy drugs for a long time because no blood comes into the tumor to wash the drugs out. As a result, the tumor cells die very quickly. The procedure usually takes about 2 or 3 hours.

Another option is radiation therapy, which uses high-energy x-rays or other types of radiation to kill cancer cells. Radiation therapy is used after surgery to help prevent the liver cancer from coming back (recurring) or to help treat symptoms. It can be given internally or externally.
  • Internal radiation therapy (brachytherapy or interstitial radiation therapy) - Tiny pellets (or “seeds”) that contain radioactive materials are injected into your bloodstream and guided to the hepatic artery. Tumor blood vessels are smaller than the blood vessels of healthy tissue. As a result, the seeds get stuck in the small blood cells that feed the tumors; however, they pass right through the larger blood vessels that feed healthy liver tissue. The pellets release their radiation slowly into the tumor without damaging healthy tissue. Brachytherapy lets the doctor use a higher dose of radiation than EBRT. This type of treatment involves a one-time procedure.
  • External beam radiation therapy (EBRT) - Radiation from a high-energy x-ray machine (linear accelerator) outside the body is focused on the cancer cells. EBRT can harm both the cancer cells and nearby healthy tissue. Most people are treated with EBRT for a few minutes 5 days a week for 3 to 5 weeks as an outpatient. This technique is rarely used for liver cancer.
This content has been reviewed and approved by Myo Thant, MD.

This content was last modified on August 22, 2007 .
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