Abstract: | Among 37 patients with hepatocellular carcinoma given systemic chemotherapy, 12 (32 percent) lived 14 to 37 months from initiation of treatment whereas the remainder died within five months. Individual factors associated with improved survival included fully ambulatory performance status, lack of jaundice, response to chemotherapy, the fibrolamellar carcinoma pathologic variant, absence of cirrhosis, and normal serum alpha-fetoprotein levels. Patients living longer than 12 months fell into two groups. Seven patients with fibrolamellar carcinoma lacked evidence of hepatitis B serum markers or cirrhosis and had normal alpha-fetoprotein levels and surprisingly frequent extrahepatic metastases. All but one were Caucasians aged 25 years or less. The other five "long-term" survivors were all fully ambulatory without jaundice, and the majority were older non-Caucasians with tumor confined to the liver at the time of diagnosis and with hepatitis B markers, elevated alpha-fetoprotein levels, or cirrhosis. All patients without fibrolamellar carcinoma who were less than fully ambulatory or who had jaundice died quickly. Patients with fibrolamellar carcinoma have homogeneous clinical features, and their disease follows a relatively indolent course. In other patients with hepatocellular carcinoma, assessment of ambulatory status and serum bilirubin determination can identify those with some prospect of prolonged survival. |