Abstract

With recent advances in systemic therapy, an increasing number of patients with advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) are expected to benefit from surgery. However, given the complex background of the disease and frequent presence of underlying liver injury, treatment of advanced HCC is complex and the treatment principle applied to colorectal liver metastases, for which conversion surgery has been actively performed, is often not applicable to patients with HCC. To maximize the survival outcomes of patients with HCC, optimization of each step of treatment through a multidisciplinary approach is inevitable. As initial treatment, systematic removal of tumor-bearing portal territory is associated with improved survival in patients with solitary HCC, and radiofrequency ablation is also effective for small, oligo HCCs. Although the high incidence of recurrence even after curative-intent treatment is a major concern in HCC, aggressive treatment for recurrence is important, because a prolonged cancer-free interval is associated with improved overall survival. For patients with advanced disease, recently introduced molecular-targeted agents may be effective for successful conversion to surgery in initially unresectable cases, although the overall response rate of HCC to systemic therapies remains unsatisfactory as compared to that of colorectal liver metastases. This report revisits the theoretical bases for management of HCC and discusses current strategies for maximizing survival of patients with advanced HCC.

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