Abstract
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) presenting as obstructive jaundice due to intrabile duct tumor growth is being reported with increasing frequency. We describe our clinical experiences and evaluate the results of different operative procedures for this disease. A retrospective study was undertaken to review 18 patients with obstructive jaundice by tumor emboli from HCC during a 15-year period of time. We reviewed clinical features, types of operative procedures, operative findings, and survival in the patients. All patients on initial examination had recurrent episodic jaundice or cholangitis. Types of surgical procedures were choledochotomy with T-tube drainage alone in nine patients, choledochotomy with T-tube drainage followed by hepatectomy in six, and T-tube drainage followed by transcatheter hepatic arterial chemoembolization in the remaining three patients. Liver cirrhosis was the associated disease in 15 (83.3%). There were three postoperative deaths (16.7%). The mean survival time for nine patients with external drainage alone was 4.5 months. For the three patients with T-tube drainage and transcatheter hepatic arterial chemoembolization, mean survival time was 11 months. Six patients who had undergone hepatectomy had a better postoperative survival time, with 1 surviving for more than 3 years and another alive for 70 months, without evidence of recurrence at the moment. Jaundice is not necessarily a harbinger of advanced disease and a contraindication for surgery. Managed properly, these patients will have satisfactory palliation and occasional cure.
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