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Is hepatectomy an appropriate option for bilobar liver metastasis with portal vein tumor thrombus of colorectal cancer?

Kwang Yeol Paik
Published in: Asia-Pacific journal of clinical oncology (2021)
The prognosis of patients with multiple liver metastasis of colorectal cancer (CLM) on both lobes accompanied by a portal vein tumor thrombus (PVTT) remains unclear. We report two patients with multiple CLM and PVTT who underwent liver resection. A 73-year-old man had successful extended right hemi-hepatectomy with a thrombectomy for a macroscopic tumor thrombus in the right portal branch and multiple CLM in both lobes. At 8 months after surgery, the patient had multiple CLM in the remnant lobe with left main PVTT and died 14 months after liver surgery. A 64-year-old woman who had previously undergone palliative chemotherapy for adenocarcinoma of the ascending colon presented with CLM accompanied by a macroscopic tumor thrombus in the left portal branch. Tumor and PVTT had progressed despite various regimens of chemotherapy. Left hemi-hepatectomy with radiofrequency ablation on right lobe and right hemicolectomy were performed. However, CLM occurred again within 3 months after the liver surgery. Considering these cases, a poor prognosis may be expected even though the tumor is successfully removed by liver resection.
Keyphrases
  • poor prognosis
  • minimally invasive
  • radiofrequency ablation
  • locally advanced
  • rectal cancer
  • pulmonary artery
  • pulmonary arterial hypertension