RESUMO
The growing clinical impact of radiofrequency ablation of liver lesions is reflected by a rapidly increasing number of published papers. Experimental work focuses on factors that reduce the variability of the ablation zone. The Pringle-maneuver plays a key role in this question from a surgeon's perspective. Large single center studies and a meta-analysis show a sharp rise in the rate of local recurrences for tumors larger 3 cm. An open surgical approach is significantly correlated to a low local recurrence rate. Bile duct lesions and intrahepatic abscesses are the most frequent complications. Intraductal bile duct cooling can prevent these complications. Three prospective randomized trials support the use of RFA for small hepatocellular carcinoma. The use of RFA in patients with multiple colorectal metastases is supported by single center studies showing a 3 year survival of > 35%. The favourable cost / benefit ratio will make RFA a part of future multimodal cancer therapy concepts.