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1.
There are many treatment options for patients with metastatic colorectal carcinoma confined to the liver. Surgical resection alone can result in significant prolongation of survival in patients with favorable prognostic factors. Randomized studies of hepatic artery infusion therapy after complete resection of liver metastases have demonstrated improvements in hepatic recurrence-free survival but no impact on overall survival. Randomized trials evaluating the treatment of unresectable disease with hepatic artery infusion therapy have demonstrated higher response rates (31%-50%) than those seen with systemic chemotherapy (8%-20%) but no survival benefit. Vascular isolation and perfusion of the liver with chemotherapy with or without biologic agents under hyperthermic conditions is another regional modality that has been explored for the treatment of unresectable colorectal cancer liver metastases. Large series report high partial response rates (68%-77%), with responses being achieved in patients with advanced tumor burden and in those who have disease progression through prior treatment of hepatic metastases.  相似文献   

2.
Hepatic colorectal metastases present a challenging problem in patients with recurrent colorectal cancer. Twenty percent of patients with recurrence will have liver metastases as a component of their disease, and only 10% of these patients will have isolated liver metastases that are resectable. Although systemic chemotherapy alone has not proven efficacious in the treatment of liver metastases, a number of options exist in managing these lesions. For those that are resectable, surgery remains the optimal treatment, with an expected 5-year survival rate of 33%-39% based on several large series. Hepatic artery chemotherapy is another adjunct treatment in patients undergoing resection and may further improve survival. This benefit may be even more pronounced when combined with systemic chemotherapy. Newer-generation agents are likely to further improve results. More recently, new therapeutic modalities have been used to treat unresectable lesions. These include hepatic artery chemotherapy and ablative techniques such as radiofrequency ablation and cryoablation. This article will highlight the data regarding hepatic resection for colorectal metastases, describe the rationale for and efficacy of hepatic arterial chemotherapy in the postoperative adjuvant setting and in unresectable liver disease, and review the current literature describing ablative techniques in the treatment of liver metastases.  相似文献   

3.
Hepatic metastases are common with colorectal cancer. The primary blood supply to hepatic metastases is the hepatic artery. Regional chemotherapy utilizing the hepatic artery is one treatment option for liver metastases. The advantage of hepatic arterial chemotherapy is that high concentrations of the therapeutic drug are obtained in the liver with minimal systemic toxicity. Recently, systemic chemotherapy regimens have been added to hepatic arterial infusional chemotherapy to treat hepatic metastases. Due to the high response rates in the liver, resection rates are increasing in patients originally thought to have unresectable liver disease. Hepatic arterial chemotherapy has also been used in the adjuvant setting after resection of all liver metastases in order to minimize hepatic recurrences. The role of hepatic arterial infusional therapy in treating hepatic colorectal metastases includes treating patients with both resectable and unresectable metastases in the adjuvant, neoadjuvant, or palliative settings.  相似文献   

4.
The most common site of metastasis from colorectal carcinoma is the liver. Surgical resection of hepatic metastases can result in long-term survival. The majority of patients have unresectable disease, however, and even if hepatic metastases are resected, most patients will still experience relapse, often in the liver. Hepatic arterial infusion (HAI) of chemotherapy allows high concentrations of a drug to be delivered directly to hepatic metastases with minimal systemic toxicity. HAI therapy has been used to treat unresectable isolated hepatic metastases of colorectal cancer and has also been investigated as adjuvant therapy after resection. This review examines the role of HAI as therapy for both unresectable and resectable hepatic metastases.  相似文献   

5.
The prognosis of patients with unresectable liver metastases is poor, even if hepatic arterial infusion chemotherapy (HAI) or systemic chemotherapy is administered. A pilot study was performed to evaluate the feasibility and efficacy of multimodality therapy with hepatectomy after HAI and portal embolization for such patients. Eight patients with colorectal carcinoma and synchronous unresectable liver metastases underwent resection of the primary tumor and placement of a pump, followed by HAI with 5-fluorouracil and mitomycin C. Owing to shrinkage of the liver metastases, two patients could undergo extended right hepatic lobectomy after portal embolization, which was deemed to be essential to prevent post-operative hepatic failure. The median survival time of the eight patients was 30 months, with a response rate of 75%. Complications including sclerosing cholangitis and duodenal ulcer were observed in five patients (63%). Additional hepatectomy could be performed successfully after portal embolization without morbidity in two patients. These two patients are still alive more than 6 years after initiation of HAI and have been free of disease for more than 5 years after hepatectomy. Hepatectomy after HAI and portal embolization is feasible and may be an option to cure selected patients with initially unresectable liver metastases.   相似文献   

6.
目的 探讨经肝动脉药盒灌注(HAI)氟脲苷(FUDR)联合全身化疗治疗不可切除老年结直肠癌肝转移患者的疗效及安全性.方法 对18例不可手术切除的老年结直肠癌肝转移回顾性分析.所有患者采用一种改进的介入方法植入肝动脉药盒,术后第2天开始接受HAI FUDR联合全身化疗.对治疗疗效、毒副反应及随访结果进行分析.结果 18例患者的总有效率为94.4%,其中完全缓解1例(5.6%),部分缓解16例(88.9%),疾病进展1例(5.6%).8例患者转化为可手术切除,转化率为44.4%.中位无进展生存时间为26.0个月,中位总生存时间为30.2个月.结论 HAI FUDR联合全身化疗是治疗不可切除老年结直肠癌肝转移的一种安全有效的方法,可获得较高的手术切除率.  相似文献   

7.
Treatment of liver metastases, an update on the possibilities and results   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Long-term results after liver resection for colorectal liver metastases show 5-year survival rates between 35 and 40%. However, only a limited number of patients appear to be candidates for resection, far more patients prove to have unresectable disease. Present challenges in liver surgery for colorectal metastases are to improve patient selection, to increase the resectability rate and to improve survival by multimodality treatment approaches. The variables most consistently associated with a poor prognosis and tumour recurrence are tumour-positive resection margins and the presence of extra-hepatic disease. Hence, patient selection and preoperative staging should concentrate on accurate imaging of the liver lesions and the detection of extrahepatic disease. For liver imaging, spiral computed tomography (CT) scan or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), supplemented by intra-operative ultrasound, are currently regarded as the best methods for evaluating the anatomy and resectability of colorectal liver metastases. Extrahepatic disease should be investigated by spiral CT of the chest and abdomen and when possible by 2-fluouro-2-deoxy-D-glucose-positron emission tomography (FDG-PET). Resection remains the gold standard for the surgical treatment of colorectal liver metastases. In experienced centres, resection is a safe procedure and mortality rates are below 5%. The aim of resection should be to obtain tumour-negative resection margins. Edge cryosurgery should be considered in cases where very close resection margins are anticipated. The role of adjuvant chemotherapy after resection is still controversial, although two recent studies show a clear benefit. For the moment, local tumour ablative therapies such as cryotherapy and radiofrequency therapy should be considered as an adjunct to hepatic resection in those cases in which resection can not deal with all of the tumour lesions. In these cases, there seems a beneficial effect of a combined treatment consisting of resection and local tumour ablation. At this stage, there are no randomised data that local tumour ablation is as effective as resection. For a selected group of patients with unresectable liver metastases, there may be a chance to turn unresectable disease to resectable disease by aggressive neo-adjuvant chemotherapy or portal vein embolisation. For patients with unresectable disease, many different chemotherapy schedules may be used based on systemic drug administration. Regional chemotherapy and isolated liver perfusion should only be used within a study design.  相似文献   

8.
A number of cancers present with synchronous or metachronous hepatic metastases. Historically, many of these patients were considered unresectable and were treated with either systemic chemotherapy or supportive care. Today, a variety of options exist for the management of hepatic metastases. Newer agents for systemic therapy continue to be introduced and are providing improved progression-free and overall survival and increased resectability of liver metastases. However, complete surgical resection of isolated hepatic metastases remains the optimal management for these patients. Surgical interventions can be offered to patients with hepatic-only metastases. Hepatic artery chemotherapy represents an adjunct for those patients undergoing resection and can improve survival. This benefit may be even more pronounced when combined with systemic chemotherapy. Newer generation biologic agents can improve results. New therapeutic modalities to treat lesions that are unresectable include ablative techniques such as radiofrequency ablation (RFA) and cryoablation. This article will examine modalities of diagnosis of hepatic metastases and highlight the data regarding hepatic resection for metastases of several types of primary cancers, the rationale for, and efficacy of, hepatic arterial chemotherapy, in both the postoperative adjuvant setting and in unresectable liver disease, and review the current literature for ablative techniques in the treatment of liver metastases.  相似文献   

9.
The development of liver metastases is a common clinical entity in the clinical course of colorectal cancer. For patients with isolated liver involvement, surgical resection is the only treatment that can provide a chance of prolonged survival and cure. However, most of these patients are not initially eligible for the surgery. Selected patients with initially considered to have unresectable disease may become resectable after systemic (chemotherapy ± biological therapy) and loco-regional treatment modalities including hepatic arterial infusion. Patients who have colorectal liver metastases ideally should be referred to a multidisciplinary cancer care team in order to identify the most optimal management approach.  相似文献   

10.
We report 2 cases of synchronous bilobar multiple liver metastases from colorectal cancer which are hepatectomised following a hepatic arterial infusion chemotherapy. Both cases were considered unresectable metastases before chemotherapy. Case 1: A 55-year-old male, with rectal cancer and multiple hepatic metastases, was performed a low anterior resection. Hepatic arterial infusion chemotherapy (5-FU 1 g/m2 5h qw) and systemic chemotherapy (5-FU/LV) were administered. Twelve months after the first surgery, hepatectomy was performed. Case 2: Right hemicolectomy was performed on a 66-year-old male, with cancer of the transverse colon and multiple hepatic metastases. Hepatic arterial infusion chemotherapy was administered 38 times. Thirteen months after the first surgery, hepatectomy and MCT were performed. Even among the cases of unresectable hepatic metastases from colorectal cancer, there are some in which resection is possible followed by hepatic arterial infusion chemotherapy. Re-evaluation for hepatectomy is needed for the cases where hepatic arterial infusion chemotherapy is administered.  相似文献   

11.
Liver metastases from colorectal cancer (CRC) are common in patients presenting with an initial diagnosis of metastatic disease or at the time of recurrence. Without treatment, patients with metastatic disease have a poor prognosis. Surgical resection of the metastases might provide long-term benefit.; however, the size, number, or location of the metastases can limit the ability to perform a resection. The use of chemotherapy, both systemic and via hepatic artery infusion, in patients undergoing surgery for liver metastases from CRC has augmented the long-term survival benefits and even the cure obtained in some patients with surgery. Chemotherapy might also convert a portion of patients with initially unresectable liver metastases to resectable. A growing body of literature is helping to define the role of chemotherapy for potentially resectable liver metastases and for initially unresectable liver metastases. The introduction of newer agents such as oxaliplatin and irinotecan, and targeted agents such as cetuximab and bevacizumab, has led to meaningful improvements in response rates and survival over those previously achieved with 5-fluorouracil. Further trials are needed to refine the use of chemotherapy and targeted agents in the management of patients with liver metastases.  相似文献   

12.
Most colorectal cancers metastatic to the liver are resistant to chemotherapy and are not amenable to surgical resection. This study evaluated our 6-year experience (July 1992-July 1998) in treating patients with unresectable hepatic colorectal metastases refractory to systemic 5-fluorouracil (5-FU). One hundred fifty-three patients underwent cryosurgical ablation (CSA) of 5-FU-resistant hepatic metastases. The patients then received either hepatic arterial floxuridine (FUDR), systemic CPT-11, or no postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy. Number, size, and location of hepatic metastases, carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) levels, and type of postoperative treatment were analyzed. One to 15 lesions were frozen (median number, 3; median size, 6 cm), for a total of 73 synchronous and 80 metachronous lesions. Overall median survival was 28.4 months from the date of diagnosis of liver metastases and 16.1 months from the time of CSA. After cryosurgery alone, median survival was 13 months, which was significantly shorter than the post-CSA survival of 23.6 months with adjuvant CPT-11 and 21.2 months with hepatic FUDR (P = 0.007). Predictors of survival included preoperative CEA, postoperative reduction in CEA, and adjuvant chemotherapy (P < 0.05). Neither size, number of lesions, nor tumor location impacted survival. At a median follow-up of 13 months, 67% of patients have recurred (35% hepatic, 16% extrahepatic, and 49% both). Twenty percent of the recurrences were in the lobe of the CSA site. The 25 patients who underwent a second CSA had a median survival of 28.4 months from CSA and 40 months from the date of diagnosis of liver metastases. These data indicate that CSA offers an effective alternative for unresectable patients resistant to 5-FU. Systemic CPT-11 or regional FUDR may further prolong survival after CSA.  相似文献   

13.
Liver surgery has been known to cure metastatic colorectal cancer in a small proportion of patients. However, advances in procedural technique and chemotherapy now allow more patients to have safe, potentially curative surgery. Here we review surgery for unresectable colorectal liver metastases using an expert multidisciplinary approach. With multidisciplinary management of patients with effective chemotherapy that can downstage metastases, more patients with previously inoperable disease can benefit from surgery. Portal vein embolization results in hypertrophy of the future liver remnant; on occasions, combining embolization with staged liver resection permits potentially curative surgery for patients previously unable to survive resection. However, increasing use of chemotherapy has raised awareness of potential hepatotoxicity and other deleterious effects of cytotoxic agents. Prolonged prehepatectomy chemotherapy therefore can reduce resectability even using a 2-stage procedure. Suitable timing of surgery for unresectable liver metastases during chemotherapy is critical. Because of advances in chemotherapy, colorectal cancer, like ovarian cancer, can now show survival benefit from maximum surgical debulking. Benefit from such maximum hepatic debulking surgery for metastatic colorectal disease is uncertain, but likely. Surgery in isolation may be approaching technical limits, but is now likely to help more patients because of the success of complementary strategies, particularly newer chemotherapy and targeted therapy. Expert individualized multidisciplinary treatment planning and problem-solving is essential.  相似文献   

14.
AIMS: Hepatic resection is a standard procedure in the treatment of colorectal liver metastases. Liver metastases are frequent in breast cancer, but resectional treatment is rarely possible and few reports have addressed the results of surgical treatment for metastatic breast cancer. The aim of our study was to analyse the outcome of patients with metastatic breast cancer after resection of isolated hepatic secondaries and possibly to identify selection criteria for patients who may benefit from surgery. METHODS: Between 1984 and 1998, 90 patients with a history of breast cancer and suspected liver metastases were referred for surgical evaluation. Fifty-four patients also had extrahepatic disease or metastases from another primary tumour; multiple liver metastases were not amenable to surgical treatment in 20 patients. Five patients were treated by regional chemotherapy via an intra-arterial port catheter; after liver resection two patients were found to have liver metastases from intercurrent colorectal cancer. Thus only nine liver resections for metastatic breast cancer could be performed with curative intent. RESULTS: No patient died post-operatively after liver resection. In the follow-up period, four of the nine patients who were treated with curative intent received systemic chemotherapy. At a median follow-up of 29 months, four patients died from tumour recurrence. Five patients are currently alive. Five-year survival in the resection group was calculated as 51% (Kaplan-Meier estimate). Node-negative primary breast cancer and a long interval between treatment of the primary and liver metastases appeared to be associated with long survival after liver resection. CONCLUSIONS: These observations suggest that careful follow-up and adequate patient selection could offer some patients with isolated liver metastases from breast cancer a chance of long-term survival.  相似文献   

15.
The management of colorectal cancer patients with liver metastases is a common clinical problem. If patients can undergo resection of liver metastases, long-term survival can be achieved. Converting a patient from unresectable to resectable, however, remains a major challenge. The majority of patients who undergo liver resection for colorectal metastases recur; therefore, adjuvant treatment following resection should be considered. Emerging literature suggests that hepatic arterial infusion (HAI) can be combined with systemic chemotherapy. Both therapies can be given at nearly full doses, thus improving resectability and outcomes for patients with colorectal liver metastases. HAI plus systemic can also be a useful option for adjuvant treatment after hepatic resection.Key Words: Liver metastases, colorectal cancer, hepatic arterial infusion, conversion treatment, adjuvant  相似文献   

16.
Presurgical chemotherapy in patients being considered for liver resection   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Kemeny N 《The oncologist》2007,12(7):825-839
The liver is a frequent site of metastatic disease for colorectal cancer patients. Approximately 15% of patients have liver metastases at diagnosis and another 50% develop metastatic disease to the liver over the course of their disease. Advances in systemic chemotherapy and surgical techniques for hepatic resection have led to longer survival times for these patients. There is no doubt that unresectable patients benefit from systemic chemotherapy. For patients who have resectable disease, the timing of chemotherapy is still not clear. This review addresses the pros and cons of presurgical chemotherapy. The benefits of preoperative chemotherapy include decreasing tumor size, controlling micrometastatic disease, assessing activity of chemotherapy, improving chemotherapy tolerance, and perhaps allowing some prediction of the success of liver resection. The risks for presurgical chemotherapy include liver toxicity, the risk for progression or growth of new sites, secondary splenomegaly, selection of resistant clones, and the possibility of leaving behind active tumor that is no longer seen because of a complete radiographic response. The challenge for the future is to develop a multidisciplinary team approach that can design the best treatment plan for patients with liver metastases.  相似文献   

17.
The prognosis of a colorectal cancer patient with unresectable hepatic metastases is extremely poor. To improve the prognosis, when the hepatic metastases were initially unresectable, we performed second-look hepatectomy (s-l hepatectomy) after neoadjuvant hepatic arterial 5-FU infusion plus UFT (HAI-PMC). Here, we report the case of a sigmoid colon cancer patient with initially unresectable hepatic metastases showing a prolonged survival (6.5 years) by second-look operation after HAI-PMC. A 57-year-old woman was diagnosed with sigmoid colon cancer with unresectable liver metastases. Sigmoidectomy and hepatic arterial catheterization were performed in the initial operation, and HAI-PMC was performed 6 months after. Metastatic foci of the liver had shrunk (90.9%), but solitary metastatic lung cancer was detected during HAI. As no other metastatic lesion was observed, partial resection of the liver and lung was performed as a second-look operation, 6 months after the initial operation. The woman continued venous infusion chemotherapy as an outpatient, and she survived for 6.5 years after the initial operation. This result suggests that strategic multidisciplinary treatment utilizing s-l hepatectomy after neoadjuvant chemotherapy can lead to better prognosis for colorectal cancer patients with hepatic metastases.  相似文献   

18.
A 61-year-old man underwent curative low anterior resection for rectosigmoid colon cancer. Follow-up ultrasonography revealed unresectable multiple liver metastases at 10 months after surgery. Arterial infusion therapy with 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) was given at 1,500 mg every 2 weeks up to a total dose of 37.5 g, resulting in complete remission (CR) of the liver metastases. However, recurrence was seen 4 months after CR. Following partial hepatectomy and local ablation therapy, he received multidisciplinary treatment including local ablation therapy, arterial infusion of 5-FU and mitomycin C, and systemic chemotherapy with 5-FU/Leucovorin/CPT-11. The patient died of liver failure at 3 years and 7 months after the detection of hepatic metastases. If arterial infusion therapy achieves CR of unresectable hepatic metastases from colorectal cancer, the patient may survive for several years with multidisciplinary treatment including surgery, local ablation therapy, and systemic chemotherapy.  相似文献   

19.
The standard treatment of CRC patients with hepatic metastases is systemic chemotherapy; however, 5-year survival is disappointingly poor despite recent advances. On the other hand, in patients who undergo immediate radical surgical resection of hepatic metastases, 5-year survival reaches 30–40%. Unfortunately, only 15–20% of patients with hepatic metastases are initially eligible for a radical surgical approach. The majority of patients undergoing liver resection relapse after surgery. For this reason, new onco-surgery approaches have been investigated in recent years and the addition of biological agents to chemotherapy, such as bevacizumab and cetuximab, and the improvements of surgical techniques have opened a new scenario in the management of colorectal liver metastases. Recently, the EORTC trial has demonstrated that perioperative chemotherapy (Folfox regimen) is feasible and improves progression-free survival in patients with resectable liver metatsases. Chemotherapy and surgery can finally collaborate. In the unresectable setting, the association of chemotherapy with bevacizumab and cetuximab is particularly promising in improving resectability rate. In particular, K-RAS is a molecular response predictive factor that could be particularly useful in selecting the best treatment option in patients with unresectable liver disease.  相似文献   

20.
Hepatic artery infusion (HAI) of chemotherapeutic agents for colorectal hepatic metastases is associated with significantly higher response rates compared to systemic chemotherapy. However, response rates have not consistently translated into improved survival. Several randomized trials have evaluated the implantable pump for treating unresectable colorectal hepatic metastases. Meta-analysis of these studies have demonstrated an improved survival advantage with pump therapy as well as improved quality of life. Recent studies of HAI of chemotherapy as adjuvant therapy following liver metastases resection have also demonstrated a potential survival advantage. Toxicities of HAI can be treatment limiting, but measures have emerged for overcoming these side effects. These randomized clinical trials have established HAI as a reasonable therapeutic option in patients with unresectable disease, and as adjuvant therapy in patients with resectable disease.  相似文献   

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