Percutaneous isolated liver chemoperfusion for treatment of unresectable malignant liver tumors: technique, pharmacokinetics, clinical results.

1998 
We have developed a single-catheter technique for percutaneous isolated liver chemoperfusion (PILP) with hepatic venous isolation and charcoal hemoperfusion (HVI-CHP) for the treatment of malignant liver tumors. We report here the surgical technique, pharmacokinetics, and effectiveness of PILP in multiple advanced liver tumors. Twenty-eight patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and 18 with metastatic liver tumors underwent a total of 61 PILPs with HVI-CHP. HVI-CHP was accomplished mainly by the single-catheter technique using a novel four-lumen, two-balloon catheter; it was used to isolate and capture total hepatic venous outflow and, at the same time, to direct the filtered blood to the right atrium. Under HVI-CHP, either doxorubicin (60–150 mg/m2) or cisplatin (150–200 mg/m2) was infused via the hepatic artery. The PILP was completed successfully in all 61 trials. Two of forty-six patients died early; one of necrotizing pancreatitis and the other of hepatic arterial thrombosis. Both deaths were related directly to the hepatic arterial catheter. Excluding these two deaths, the treatments were well tolerated. The major side effects were mild to moderate chemical hepatitis and reversible myelosuppression. Of the 27 evaluable HCC patients, 17 (63%) had an objective tumor response (5 complete and 12 partial responses). In 15 patients with colorectal hepatic metastases (CHM), 7 had a sharp decrease in serum carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) levels (to <50% of their pretreatment levels) after treatment. However, a single PILP had limited efficacy in terms of the durability of remission (≤6 months in most CHM patients, as assessed by CEA levels). These results indicate that PILP with HVI-CHP has high efficacy in most patients with multiple advanced liver tumors. In addition, the results suggest a role of multiple treatment courses of PILP in the induction of long-term remission, especially for patients responsive to the first treatment.
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