Abstract

IntroductionPercutaneous thermal segmentectomy is a single-step combination of microwave ablation, performed during arterial occlusion obtained with a balloon micro catheter, followed in the same session by balloon-occluded TACE. The aim of this multicenter retrospective study is to report the mid-term oncological performance of this technique for liver malignancies > 3.0 cm and to identify risk factors for the loss of sustained complete response.MethodsOncological results were evaluated with CT or MRI according to m-RECIST (HCC) and RECISTv1.1 (metastasis/intra-hepatic cholangiocarcinoma, iCC) at 1-month, 3–6-month and then at regular-6-month intervals. To identify predictive variables associated with not achieving or losing complete response two mixed-effects multivariable logistic regression models were constructed.ResultsSixty-three patients (40/23, male/female) with primary liver malignancies (HCC = 49; iCC = 4) and metastasis (n = 10) were treated. Median diameter of target lesion was 4.5 cm (range 3.0–7.0 cm). The median follow-up time was 9.2 months. At one-month follow-up, 79.4% of patients presented with a complete response and the remaining 20.6% were partial responders. At the 3–6-month follow-up, reached by 59 of the initial 63 patients, 83.3% showed a sustained complete response, while 10.2% had a partial response and 8.5% a local recurrence. At the last follow-up, 69.8% of the lesions showed a complete response. The initial diameter of the target lesion ≥ 5.0 cm was the only independent variable associated with the risk of failure in maintaining a complete response at 6 months (OR = 8.58, 95% CI 1.38–53.43; P = 0.02).ConclusionPercutaneous thermal segmentectomy achieves promising oncological results in patients with tumors > 3.0 cm, with tumor dimension ≥ 5.0 cm being the only risk factor associated with the failure of a sustained complete response.

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