Continuous intraportal chemotherapy for prevention of metachronous hepatic metastasis in colorectal cancer

1998 
: Fifty-five colorectal cancer patients who had continuous intraportal chemotherapy between 1990 and 1993 (treated group) and 130 colorectal cancer patients who did not have portal chemotherapy between 1982 and 1993 (untreated group) were studied to clarify the effects of continuous intraportal chemotherapy on the prognosis. After a catheter was placed in the portal vein through the right gastroepiploic vein at the time of radical operation, 10 mg of MMC was continuously infused for 4 hours at operation and 500 mg/day of 5-FU was continuously infused for 7 days postoperatively. The toxicities of this therapy were not serious. The five-year survival rate was 65.3% in the treated group and 65.6% in the untreated group. The five-year disease-free survival rate was 69.8% in the treated group and 58.6% in the untreated group, with no significant difference. In stage II patients, however, the five-year disease-free survival rate in the treated group was slightly higher than in the untreated group (90.0% vs 70.3%, p = 0.073), and the rate of hepatic recurrence in the treated group was significantly lower than in the untreated group. These results suggest that continuous intraportal chemotherapy may prevent metachronous hepatic metastases in stage II colorectal cancer patients.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    0
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []