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Title: Surgical treatment and adjuvant chemotherapy in hepatocellular carcinoma patients with advanced vascular involvement. Author: Nanashima A, Sumida Y, Abo T, Nagasaki T, Ohba K, Kinoshita H, Tobinaga S, Kenji T, Takeshita H, Hidaka S, Sawai T, Yasutake T, Nagayasu T. Journal: Hepatogastroenterology; 2008; 55(82-83):627-32. PubMed ID: 18613421. Abstract: BACKGROUND/AIMS: In advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) with vascular involvement of major vessels, patients have a poor prognosis after surgical treatment. METHODOLOGY: Patient outcomes after surgical resection and the usefulness of adjuvant chemotherapy were examined in 12 patients with major hepatic vessel involvement who underwent hepatectomy with combined resection of major blood vessels. RESULTS: The main portal vein was resected in 8 patients, the inferior vena cava in 3, hilar bile duct in 2 and hepatic artery in 1. Eleven patients underwent hemihepatectomy and 1 underwent segment 4 and 5 resection. The portal branch was repaired by venoplasty. The vena cava wall was repaired by suture closure. The hepatic artery was replaced by end-to-end anastomosis. The bile duct was repaired by Roux-en-Y hepaticojejunostomy. Although 2 patients had biliary leakage, there were no postoperative complications in 10 patients. The tumor recurrence rate was 83% in the early period and cancer death within 1 year was observed in 6 (50%), while 3 with tumor recurrence survived for more than 2 years and 2 survived without recurrence. In 233 HCC patients who underwent hepatectomy, 10 patients including 2 present cases received adjuvant chemotherapy at the time of tumor recurrence and 2 had complete responses. While in 11 patients receiving chemotherapy without resection, the response rate using Gemcitabine (66%) was higher than that using low dose Cisplatin plus 5-Fluorouracil (22%). CONCLUSIONS: Complete surgical resection combined with main vascular resection could be safely performed in most advanced stage HCC patients and adjuvant chemotherapy in the early period after resection would be necessary, which may achieve longer survival in some patients even in the advanced stage.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]