Abstract

Primary hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) extending to the adjacent organ(s) is sometimes encountered in patients with large, peripherally located tumours. Over a 4-year period, a total of 151 patients received curative resection of HCC at the Surgical Department of Veterans General Hospital-Taipei, Taiwan. Of these patients, 21 underwent hepatic resection combined with en-bloc resection of the adjacent organ(s) because tumour extension was found during operation. Subsequent histological examination of the resected specimens found evidence of HCC invasion into the resected adjacent organ(s) in only nine patients (group I), and the remaining 12 patients showed no evidence of extrahepatic HCC invasion (group II). Twenty-seven HCC patients with clinico-pathologically matched tumours but without extrahepatic extension were selected as controls (group III). One patient in group I died of hepatic failure after the operation. The morbidity rate was 48% in group I and group II patients, and 30% in group III patients. The difference was not statistically significant. On evaluating the clinico-pathological factors, including DNA ploidy status of the tumours, there were no significant differences between tumours with and without extrahepatic invasion. Patients with locally invasive HCC (group I) had disease-free and overall survival rates comparable with those of the patients without local tumour invasion (group II and III). We conclude that HCC with invasion to the adjacent organ(s) does not seem to be directly related to the 'aggressiveness' of the tumour, and extrahepatic infiltration of the tumour does not preclude a chance of cure. Our results underscore the need for en-bloc resection as treatment of choice for these patients.

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