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Radiofrequency ablation versus ethanol injection for early hepatocellular carcinoma: A randomized controlled trial
Authors:Franco Brunello  Andrea Veltri  Patrizia Carucci  Eva Pagano  Giovannino Ciccone  Paolo Moretto
Affiliation:1. Divisione di Gastro-Epatologia, Ospedale San Giovanni Battista di Torino, Turin, Italyfrancobrunello@libero.it;3. Istituto di Diagnostica ed Interventistica Radiologica, Università di Torino, Turin, Italy;4. Divisione di Gastro-Epatologia, Ospedale San Giovanni Battista di Torino, Turin, Italy;5. Unità di Epidemiologia dei Tumori, Università di Torino e CPO Piemonte, Italy
Abstract:Objective. To compare percutaneous ethanol injection (PEI), the standard approach which has been used for many years to treat early non-surgical hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in cirrhotic patients, and radiofrequency ablation (RFA), which has become an interesting alternative. Material and methods. A randomized trial was carried out on 139 cirrhotic patients in Child-Pugh classes A/B with 1–3 nodes of HCC (diameter 15–30 mm), for a total of 177 lesions. Patients were randomized to receive RFA (n=70) or PEI (n=69). The primary end-point was complete response (CR) 1 year after the percutaneous ablation of all HCC nodes identified at baseline. Secondary end-points were: early (30–50 days) CR, complications, survival and costs. Results. In an intention-to-treat analysis, 1-year CR was achieved in 46/70 (65.7%) and in 25/69 (36.2%) patients treated by RFA and PEI, respectively (p=0.0005). For lesions >20 mm in diameter, there was a larger CR rate in the RFA group (68.1% versus 26.3%). An early CR was obtained in 67/70 (95.7%) patients treated by RFA compared with 42/64 (65.6%) patients treated by PEI (p=0.0001). Complications occurred in 10 and 12 patients treated by RFA and PEI, respectively. The overall survival rate was not significantly different in the RFA versus PEI arm (adjusted hazard ratio=0.88, 95% CI: 0.50–1.53). There was an incremental health-care cost of 8286 € for each additional patient successfully treated by RFA. Conclusions. The 1-year CR rate after percutaneous treatment of early HCC was significantly better with RFA than with PEI but did not provide a clear survival advantage in cirrhotic patients.
Keywords:Cost-benefit analysis  hepatocellular carcinoma  liver cirrhosis  percutaneous ethanol injection  radiofrequency ablation  randomized controlled trial
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