[Prognosis of intra-arterial chemo-embolization in metastatic liver cancer]

1989 
We treated 63 patients (pts) suffering from metastatic liver cancer with intra-arterial infusion chemotherapy, and analysed 44 of their for survival since the first treatment with regard to the primary foci of cancer and the method of intra-arterial therapy. Via the superficial femoral artery, we performed superselective hepatic catheterization by Seldinger's method. Three types of intraarterial therapy were used: Gelfoam embolization with mitomycin-C (MMC) in 12 pts (GS-TAE), capillary chemo-embolization with MMC-Lipiodol emulsion in 28 pts (LP-TAI) and "one-shot" slow infusion of MMC or cisplatinum in 4 pts. Fifty-percent survival was 189 days in pts with metastases from colo-rectal cancer (n = 20), 109 days from gastric cancer (n = 9), 100 days from pancreatobiliary cancer (n = 5) and 240 days from breast cancer (n = 7). More than one-year survival was obtained in 13 out of the 40 pts (32.5%). Survival of 12 pts, treated with GS-TAE regimen, was not significantly superior to that of 28 pts with LP-TAI regimen. Hence, we conclude that LP-TAI is the treatment of choice in chemo-embolization for unresectable liver metastases, because it causes less damage to the hepatic arterial beds, and facilitates repeat intraarterial therapy in these pts.
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