Selective Regional Chemotherapy of Unresectable Hepatic Tumours Using Lipiodol

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Abstract

Over a 30 month period from 1987 to 1990, selective hepatic cannulation under fluoroscopic control was performed in 57 consecutive patients with primary and secondary malignancies of the liver. Fifty-three patients were subsequently treated using intra-arterial Lipiodol emulsified with epirubicin. The tumours treated were hepatocellular carcinoma (n = 35), metastatic adenocarcinoma (n = 14), intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (n = 3) and leiomyosarcoma (n = 1). For hepatocellular carcinoma the cumulative survival was 38% at one year; the median survival was 12.2 months for Stage I, 6.3 months for Stage II and 0.9 months for Stage III tumours. In metastatic disease the cumulative survival was 63% at one year. These data suggest that targeted intra-arterial chemotherapy with Lipiodol-epirubicin is a useful palliative therapy for patients with Stage I and II HCC, and that a controlled trial of this treatment should be undertaken. © 1991, Harwood Academic Publishers GmbH.

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Novell, J. R., Dusheiko, G., Markham, N. I., Reddy, K., Dick, R., & Hobbs, K. E. F. (1991). Selective Regional Chemotherapy of Unresectable Hepatic Tumours Using Lipiodol. HPB Surgery, 4(3), 223–236. https://doi.org/10.1155/1991/34537

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