Show pageBacklinksCite current pageExport to PDFBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ====== 🔄 Conversion Therapy ====== In oncology, conversion therapy refers to a treatment strategy that aims to shrink or control an initially unresectable tumor, allowing it to become resectable (operable) at a later stage. 🧠Key Concept: From “incurable” to “potentially curable” 📚 Definition: A therapeutic approach used to downstage a tumor—through systemic therapy (e.g., chemotherapy, targeted therapy, immunotherapy)—so that surgical resection or local ablative therapy becomes feasible in patients who were not surgical candidates at diagnosis. 🎯 Goals: Achieve tumor reduction or disease control Make surgery or curative treatment technically possible and oncologically justified Improve overall prognosis or achieve long-term remission 🧪 Typical Scenarios: Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC): Downstaging with lenvatinib or donafenib to make liver resection or ablation possible Colorectal cancer with liver metastases: Chemotherapy used to reduce metastases to allow curative hepatectomy Esophageal, gastric, or pancreatic cancers: Neoadjuvant therapy for borderline resectable tumors ⚠️ Not to Be Confused With: Psychiatric or religious "conversion therapy" aimed at changing sexual orientation — a completely unrelated and ethically condemned practice. conversion_therapy.txt Last modified: 2025/06/19 15:54by administrador