Abstract

Background. We examined overall and disease-free survivals in a cohort of patients subjected to resection of liver metastasis from colorectal cancer (CRLM) in a 10-year period when new treatment strategies were implemented. Methods. Data from 239 consecutive patients selected for liver resection of CRLM during the period from 2002 to 2011 at a single center were used to estimate overall and disease-free survival. The results were assessed against new treatment strategies and established risk factors. Results. The 5-year cumulative overall and disease-free survivals were 46 and 24%. The overall survival was the same after reresection, independently of the number of prior resections and irrespectively of the location of the recurrent disease. The time intervals between each recurrence were similar (11 ± 1 months). Patients with high tumor load given neoadjuvant chemotherapy had comparable survival to those with less extensive disease without neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Positive resection margin or resectable extrahepatic disease did not affect overall survival. Conclusion. Our data support that one still, and perhaps to an even greater extent, should seek an aggressive therapeutic strategy to achieve resectable status for recurrent hepatic and extrahepatic metastases. The data should be viewed in the context of recent advances in the understanding of cancer biology and the metastatic process.

Highlights

  • The incidence of colorectal cancer (CRC) is increasing and is the fourth leading cause of cancer deaths worldwide [1]

  • 27 patients were deemed inoperable intraoperatively due to extensive hepatic or extrahepatic metastatic disease and excluded from the study. Five of these patients were scheduled for two-stage hepatectomy [15] but were inoperable at the 2nd surgical step

  • The cohort of 239 patients with metastatic colorectal cancer patients resected for liver metastasis was examined for overall and disease-free survivals

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Summary

Introduction

The incidence of colorectal cancer (CRC) is increasing and is the fourth leading cause of cancer deaths worldwide [1]. The main exclusion criteria for liver resection of colorectal liver metastases (CRLMs) are nonresectable liver metastasis (tumor growth into both portal branches and/or into both left and right liver vein), inadequately functioning residual liver parenchyma, or nonresectable extrahepatic disease. These exclusion criteria have all been challenged in recent years. We examined overall and disease-free survivals in a cohort of patients subjected to resection of liver metastasis from colorectal cancer (CRLM) in a 10-year period when new treatment strategies were implemented. The data should be viewed in the context of recent advances in the understanding of cancer biology and the metastatic process

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