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Title: [A case of liver metastasis from bile duct cancer effectively treated with hepatic artery infusion chemotherapy]. Author: Tsuji Y, Imai M, Katsuki Y, Yasuda T, Nishimura A. Journal: Gan To Kagaku Ryoho; 1994 Sep; 21(13):2194-7. PubMed ID: 7944438. Abstract: We performed hepatic artery infusion chemotherapy (HAI) combined with 5-FU-MMC-EPIR for bile duct cancer metastasized to the liver. We report a case for which we obtained PR. The case was a 59-year-old woman, who was diagnosed to have multiple liver metastases with an increase of CEA and LDH after 6 months from absolute curative resection for middle bile duct cancer. The patient was catheterized into the proper hepatic artery through the right femoral artery, and 5-FU 500 mg qw, MMC 4 mg q2w, and EPIR 30 mg q4w were infused via a reservoir. Two months after the treatment was begun, CEA and LDH values became normal. At the same time, PR was obtained and was shown upon CT, which continued for 5 months. After an 8-month period during which the patient was an outpatient at PS-0, multiple bone metastases appeared, and the radiotherapy was combinedly utilized for each lesion. The side effect of this method was decrease of leukocytes and blood platelets, but it disappeared by discontinuing medication. The patient died two years after the first operation, a year and four months from the time HAI was begun. It was possible to continue this treatment with PS 1-2 on an outpatient basis until one month before the patient's death. We concluded that hepatic artery infusion chemotherapy is an effective therapeutic method.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]