Abstract

BackgroundThe associating liver partition and portal vein ligation for staged hepatectomy (ALPPS) for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) with fibrosis/cirrhosis is often associated with limited growth of future liver remnant (FLR). We introduced a new procedure named transcatheter arterial embolization-salvaged ALPPS (TAE-salvaged ALPPS) which was shown to be especially suitable for HCC patients with cirrhosis or fibrosis who failed adequately to respond to conventional ALPPS. The short-term efficacy and safety for the TAE-salvaged ALPPS on patients with HCC and fibrosis/cirrhosis were studied.MethodsConsecutive HCC patients who underwent TAE-salvaged ALPPS in our hospital between November 2016 and June 2020 were retrospectively studied. The new ALPPS procedure included conventional ALPPS stage-1 using associating liver partition and portal vein ligation. When FLR failed to reach sufficient hypertrophy, TAE was carried out 2 weeks later followed by liver resection 3 weeks after ALPPS stage-1.ResultsNine of 10 patients had a single tumor (median diameter 14.0 cm, range, 5.2–17 cm). The remaining patient had multiple tumors (diameter of one tumor 14.0 cm, and two satellite foci 2.0 and 3.0 cm). R0 resection was achieved in all patients (100%) after a median of 21 days. Six patients had cirrhosis, 1 had METAVIR grade-3 fibrosis, and 3 had METAVIR grade-2 fibrosis. The median increase in FLR volume after TAE-salvaged ALPPS was 69.7% (34.4–143.9%). The absolute and relative kinetic growth rates (KGRs) were 9.9 (7.1–17.3) mL/day and 3.4% (1.9–7.2%)/day, respectively. The median absolute KGRs were 15.7, 2.6, and 19.5 mL/day in the first, second, and third postoperative weeks after ALPPS stage-1, respectively. The rapid increase in KGR on the third week was induced by TAE. The overall postoperative morbidity rates were 50,0% (5/10), 20.0% (2/10) and 70.0% (7/10) after ALPPS stage-1, TAE and ALPPS stage-2, respectively. The 90-day mortality rate was 10.0% (1/10). The median overall survival was 40 months.ConclusionsThe new TAE-salvaged ALPPS induced significant increases in FLR volumes within 3 weeks in patients with HCC and fibrosis/cirrhosis. The procedure is promising in treating patients with HCC and fibrosis/cirrhosis who fail to achieve sufficient FLR hypertrophy after conventional ALPPS stage-1.

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