Abstract

Fifty patients with obstructive jaundice with biliary tract carcinoma who underwent percutaneous transhepatic portal vein embolization (PTPE) were studied to evaluate the clinical utility of PTPE in preparation for extensive liver resection. PTPE was performed 2–3 weeks before surgery, via the standard contralateral approach in the first seven patients and via the ipsilateral approach, devised by the authors, in the last 43 patients. The following portal branches in which embolization was planned were all successfully embolized: the right portal vein in 35 patients; the right portal vein plus the left medial portal branch in 6; the left portal vein and the right anterior portal branch in 3; the left portal vein in 2; the right anterior portal branch in 3; and the right posterior portal branch in 1. There were no procedure-related complications. Helical computed tomography demonstrated compensatory hypertrophy of the non-embolized segments. After PTPE, 35 of the 50 subjects underwent major hepatectomy with or without portal vein resection and/or pancreatoduodenectomy; the remaining 15 were found to have peritoneal dissemination or liver metastasis, and no resection was performed. Of the 35 hepatectomized patients, 3 died of posthepatectomy liver failure, and 1 patient died of pneumonia with pulmonary lymphangitis carcinomatosis; the other 31 patients were discharged in good condition. The hospital death rate was 11.8% (4/35), and mortality directly related to the surgery was 8.6% (3/35). PTPE appears to have the potential to increase the safety of extensive liver resection for patients with obstructive jaundice.

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