Abstract

Obtaining a one-centimeter negative margin is an important factor in preventing disease recurrence after surgery for hepatic tumors. Cryotherapy of the resected edge has been used to achieve optimal margin clearance in cases in which the alternative would be an extended high-risk liver resection. The effect of this technique on margin recurrence was examined. Between 1994 and 2001 a total of 56 patients underwent cryosurgery with or without resection for primary and metastatic hepatobiliary malignancies. A 5-cm cryotherapy lollipop probe was used to ablate surgical margins less than one centimeter in 13 of these patients. There were seven colorectal metastases, three hepatocellular carcinomas, and three gallbladder carcinomas. The median size of the colorectal and hepatocellular lesions was 3 cm (range 2-14 cm), and all gallbladder primaries were T2 tumors. All tumors except three were located centrally in the liver requiring cryoablation of margins at segments 4, 5, and 8. Most patients had one site frozen (n = 9) with a median target temperature of -190 degrees C and a median of two freeze-thaw cycles. Final pathological analysis of the resected specimens revealed nine close (<1 cm) and four positive margins. With a median follow-up of 16 months seven patients are alive with no evidence of disease and six have developed recurrences with three of them dying of their disease. Only one (8%) of the initial recurrences was at the cryoablated margin. Cryosurgery of the resection edge facilitates liver resection for malignant tumors when margins are close or positive. Because disease recurrence at the cryoablated margin is low this technique may allow more patients to undergo effective surgical treatment of their hepatobiliary cancers.

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