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Cancer treatment pioneered in Melbourne being hailed as a global lifesaver

These treatments are part of a Melbourne-led international human trial of selective internal radiation therapy, used in conjunction with the chemotherapy drug sorafenib.

Cancer treatment pioneered in Melbourne being hailed as a global lifesaver
A new, revolutionary cancer treatment pioneered in Melbourne could soon emerge as a global lifesaver.
 
More than 100 Victorians with inoperable liver cancer have successfully been treated with the SIRT (selective internal radiation therapy).
 
These treatments are part of a Melbourne-led international human trial of SIRT, used in conjunction with the chemotherapy drug sorafenib.
 
For the procedure, tiny radioactive beads - about one-third the width of a human hair - are injected into an artery near the groin.
 
Thereafter, the beads lodge in the liver releasing a radiation dose over a number of days, shrinking tumours.
 
A Victorian woman suffering from incurable liver cancer has undergone the therapy and associate professor Peter Gibbs, a medical oncologist from the Royal Melbourne Hospital, believes she is cured.
 
"Her tumours slowly disappeared and she remains tumour free. I am convinced that she is cured," The Herald Sun quoted Gibbs, as saying.
 
Gibbs, who leads the world's biggest clinical trial of the therapy, added that in about 5% of patients tumours disappeared while in most others cases the treatment was prolonging lives.

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