Abstract

Among 41 patients with synchronous liver metastases of colorectal cancer, 15 patients underwent synchronous resection of their liver metastases and achieved a median survival time (MST) of 1,441 days (versus 748 days for the 26 patients without resection, p=0.038), a median relapse-free survival time of 652 days (MST not reached), and a recurrence rate in the residual liver of 20% (3/15 patients). The alternating hepatic arterial infusion and systemic chemotherapy showed partial response (PR) in 6 cases, stable disease (SD) in 8 cases, and progressive disease (PD) in 1 case (n=15/26). They had an objective response rate of 40% (6/15), tumor control rate (>/= SD) of 93.3% (14/15), one-year progression-free survival rate of 35.7%, 50% time to progression of 270 days, one-year survival rate of 76.2%, and two-year survival rate of 50.8% (MST not reached). Grade 3 leucopenia was observed in 2/15 patients (13.3%). These results suggest that the present alternating therapy may become a standard regimen for patients in whom synchronous resection of liver metastases is impossible and patients who have stage IV colorectal cancer with a risk of recurrence in the remnant liver and/or at extrahepatic sites such as the lungs.

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