Abstract

During 1958-1993, 2030 patients with pathologically proven primary liver cancer (PLC) were retrospectively reviewed. Comparison between small PLC (< or = 5 cm, n = 514) and large PLC (> 5 cm, n = 1516) revealed that small PLC had a higher resection rate (92.4% versus 49.1%), lower operative mortality (1.7% versus 5.2%), a higher percentage of single tumour nodules (78.0% versus 53.4%), a higher percentage of well encapsulated tumour (74.5% versus 35.8%) and higher survival rates after resection (5-year, 63.8% versus 36.6%; 10-year, 46.8% versus 28.5%). No significant difference was found between survival following limited resection (n = 440) and lobectomy (n = 34) in patients with small PLC. Re-resection of any subclinical recurrence or solitary pulmonary metastasis after small PLC resection was done in 70 cases. These results indicate that resection is still the modality of choice for treatment of small PLC; limited resection instead of lobectomy was the key to increasing resectability and decreasing operative mortality; re-resection of subclinical recurrence was important to prolong survival further.

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