Abstract

Twenty-two patients with portal vein tumor thrombi secondary to hepatocellular carcinoma were studied to evaluate the effectiveness of diagnostic and treatment procedures. B-mode ultrasonography is a simple and accurate means for the detection of tumor thrombus in the portal vein. All of the 22 patients were correctly diagnosed by this method, which should be used as the initial screening procedure in such patients. Fourteen of the 22 patients underwent surgical procedures, including embolectomy from the portal trunk; removal of the tumor thrombi combined with hepatectomy or through the rechanneled umbilical vein; and operative transcatheter arterial chemotherapy. The other 8 patients were treated by transcatheter arterial embolization or were not treated. The surgical treatment effectively prevented acute variceal bleeding in the patients who underwent the procedures successfully. The mean value of the portal venous pressure was reduced from 46 cmH2O to 32 cmH2O after the surgery. As a result of the effective portal decompression, the patients in the surgical group had a better prognosis and longer mean survival than the others. Our study suggests that portal vein tumor thrombus is not an absolute contraindication for surgery, and that accurate detection and prompt treatment are the keys to the achievement of better clinical results.

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