Abstract

The purpose of our study was to evaluate the usefulness of percutaneous ethanol installation using CO(2)-enhanced sonography for patients with nonresectable hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Forty-six patients with 65 HCC lesions were examined with contrast-enhanced sonography with direct injection of CO(2) into the proper hepatic artery during arteriography. We performed percutaneous ethanol injection guided by CO(2)-enhanced sonography for the treatment of hypervascular HCC lesions that could not be treated with conventional percutaneous ethanol injection or with transcatheter arterial embolization. CO(2)-enhanced sonography detected five additional small HCC lesions before treatment (p<0.05) and 14 new lesions during follow-up (p<0.01), than conventional sonography detected. CO(2)-enhanced sonography showed positive enhancement of residual lesions after initial treatment (n = 3) and incomplete local treatment (n = 5) that were not detected on conventional sonography. These 27 lesions were successfully treated with percutaneous ethanol injection using a mixture of iodized oil and ethanol and guided by CO(2)-enhanced sonography. CO(2)-enhanced sonography is a sensitive method for detecting residual viable lesions and small new HCC lesions that cannot be detected with conventional sonography. Percutaneous ethanol injection guided by CO(2)-enhanced sonography can treat hypervascular HCC lesions that cannot be treated with conventional percutaneous ethanol injection or transcatheter arterial embolization.

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