To clarify whether pre‐operalive transcatheter arterial embolization (TAE) improves survival after hepatectomy, a prospective randomized comparative study was done. Of a total of 115 registered patients having solitary hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) 2 to 5 cm in diameter, 18 (15.7%) were excluded after randomization. As a result, 97 patients were chosen as subjects and divided into two groups: hepatectomy with (group A: n = 50) and without (group B: n=47) pre‐operative TAE. The period of observation of the patients who survived the surgery was between 4.0 and 6.6 years. The randomization appeared to have provided well‐balanced groups of patients and the clinico‐pathological characteristics of the two groups were quite similar. The necrotic part of the cancerous lesions, as confirmed by operative specimens, amounted to 74.8 ±33.4% (mean±SD) in group A and 6.8 ±7.2% in group B (P<0.01). However, the cancer‐free survival rates after hepatectomy in both groups showed little difference (39.1±7.0 (%±SE) and 31.1±0.1, respectively). We speculate that TAE is not effective against such HCC accessory lesions as minute intrahepatic metastasis and tumor thrombus and that pre‐operative TAE does not improve post‐operative survival.
Between March 1976 and December 1992, 137 (57 per cent) of 239 patients with pancreatic duct cell cancer underwent resection; 79 (58 per cent) of the 137 had combined resection of the pancreas and portal vein. Sixty-three of the 79 patients underwent resection of the portal vein alone; six died (mortality rate 10 per cent). The mortality rate was the same as that in 58 patients with no resection of the portal vein. In the remaining 16 patients adjacent arteries were also resected, with seven deaths. Of patients with resection of the portal vein alone who underwent curative resection, four survived more than 5 years, accounting for nearly half of the nine 5-year survivors. Combined resection of the pancreas and portal vein is associated with both an increased resectability rate and improved long-term survival.
Pancreatic duct cell cancer is characterized by a low resectability rate and a low long-term survival rate. Between September 1974 and December 1992 in our institution, 149 (59%) of the 253 patients with this cancer underwent resection. The operative procedures were pancreatoduodenectomy in 105 patients, total pancreatectomy in 36, and distal pancreatectomy in 8. The tumor was extirpated with extensive dissection of the lymph nodes and excision of the nerve plexus in the retroperitoneum. Of the 149 patients, 79 (53%) underwent combined resection of the pancreas and the portal vein; 16 of the 79 patients also underwent resection of the adjacent arteries. Three patients died within 30 days after surgery, and 17 other patients succumbed within 2 to 7 months. The mortality among patients undergoing pancreatectomy and resection of the portal vein (9.5%) was similar to that of patients with pancreatectomy alone (10%). Curative resection was necessary for long-term survival. The 5-year survival rate in 61 patients with the curative resection was 15%. Ten patients lived more than 5 years. Even patients with lymph node metastases and cancer invasion of the portal vein had a prolonged survival. Intraoperative irradiation was carried out in 35 patients to improve the survival rate, but without success. Infusion chemotherapy with 5-fluorouracil via the portal vein was tried in 25 patients, resulting in a decrease in liver metastasis. We have made some progress in the first step toward improving treatment, although we are far from the goal and it is necessary to conduct additional trials.
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