| Literature DB >> 26718962 |
Mark C Burgmans1, Eleonora M de Leede2, Christian H Martini3, Ellen Kapiteijn4, Alexander L Vahrmeijer2, Arian R van Erkel5.
Abstract
Liver malignancies are a major burden of disease worldwide. The long-term prognosis for patients with unresectable tumors remains poor, despite advances in systemic chemotherapy, targeted agents, and minimally invasive therapies such as ablation, chemoembolization, and radioembolization. Thus, the demand for new and better treatments for malignant liver tumors remains high. Surgical isolated hepatic perfusion (IHP) has been shown to be effective in patients with various hepatic malignancies, but is complex, associated with high complication rates and not repeatable. Percutaneous isolated liver perfusion (PHP) is a novel minimally invasive, repeatable, and safer alternative to IHP. PHP is rapidly gaining interest and the number of procedures performed in Europe now exceeds 200. This review discusses the indications, technique and patient management of PHP and provides an overview of the available data.Entities:
Keywords: Interventional oncology; Liver/hepatic; Melphalan; Percutaneous hepatic perfusion
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26718962 PMCID: PMC4858556 DOI: 10.1007/s00270-015-1276-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cardiovasc Intervent Radiol ISSN: 0174-1551 Impact factor: 2.740
Summary of conducted studies on percutaneous hepatic perfusion
| References | Year | No. pts (no. PHPs) | Type of hepatic malignancy ( | Chemotherapy | Type of study | Intervention | Endpoint | OR | hPFS, median | OS, median | Complicationsc |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hughes et al. [ | 2015 | 93 (max 6 per pt) | Melanoma (ocular 83; cutaneous 10) | Melphalan | RCT | PHPb | Response (primary: hPFS) | 27.3 % (vs 4.1 % in control) | 7.0 months (vs 1.6 in controls) | 10.6 months (vs 10.0 in controls)Ω | Neutropenia (85.7 %), thrombocytopenia (80.0 %), anemia (62.9 %), self-limiting hyperbilirubinemia (14.3 %), cardiac toxicity (12.9 %), cerebral ischemia (1.2 %), death 3.2 % |
| Vogl et al. [ | 2014 | 14 (18) | Melanoma (ocular 8; cutaneous 3), Gastric/Breast/CA (1) | Melphalan | Retrospective | PHPb | Response and toxicity | 54 (7) | n.r. | n.r. | Pancytopenia; death (7.1 %; retroperitoneal hemorrhage) |
| Fitzpatrick et al. [ | 2014 | 5 (15) | Melanoma (ocular 4; cutaneous 1) | Melphalan | Case series | PHPb | Feasibility and toxicity | n.r. | n.r. | n.r. | Transient mild hypothermia and metabolic acidosis |
| Fukumoto et al. [ | 2014 | 68 (103) | HCC, BCLC intermediate (27) or advanced (41) | Mitomycin C and/or doxorubicin | Prospective | Resection + PHP | Response | 70.6 (48) | n.r. | 25 months | Leukopenia (44.1 %), serum AST gr. 3/4 (77.9 %), hair loss (72 %), gastroduodenal ulcer (4.4 %) |
| Forster et al. [ | 2013 | 10 (27) | Melanoma (ocular 5; cutaneous 3, unknown 1). Sarcoma (1) | Melphalan | Retrospective | PHPb | Response and toxicity | 50 (5) | 240 days | n.r. | Bone marrow suppression; mild elevation serum troponin (70 %) |
| Pingpank et al. [ | 2011a | 23 (68) | NET (23) | Melphalan | Prospective | PHPb | Response (ORR) | 79 | 39 months | n.r. | Acute transaminitis gr 3/4 (22 %); neutropenia 47 %, thrombocytopenia 29 %, anemia (15 %). Death 0.04 % (cholangitis) |
| Miao et al. [ | 2008 | 51 (136) | Melanoma (ocular 12, cutaneous 4), NET (12), CRC (7), HCC (5), RCC (4), AdrC/Breast/CA (2), Ewing (1) | Melphalan | Prospective | PHPb | Hemodynamics and metabolic changes | n.r. | n.r. | n.r. | Transient hypotension and metabolic acidosis; nausea/vomiting (10 %) |
| Pingpank [ | 2005 | 28 (74) | Melanoma (ocular 10, cutaneous 3), CRC (2), Hepatobiliary (3), NET (4), RCC (2), AdrC/Breast/Sarcoma/PA (1) | Melphalan | Phase I | PHPb | MTD, toxicity, pharmacokinetics | 29.6 (8) | n.r. | n.r. | Neutropenia gr 3/4 (73.6 %); thrombocytopenia gr 3/4 (36.8 %); anemia (21.1 %)e |
| Ku et al. [ | 2004 | 22 (40) | HCC (22) | Doxorubicin | Prospective | resection + PHP | Efficacy | 86 (19) | n.r. | 1 and 5 years OS: 86 and 47 % | Leukopenia (45.5 %), hair loss (63.6 %) |
| Savier et al. [ | 2003 | 4 (10) | Breast/CRC/Gastric/CA (1) | Melphalan | Prospective study | IHP + PHP | Feasibility; pharmacokinetics | n.r. | n.r. | n.r. | Neutropenia grade 3/4 (50 %) |
| Ku et al. [ | 1998 | 28 (39) | HCC, TNM III (1) or IV-A (27) | Doxorubicin | Prospective | PHP | Response and survival | 63 (17) | n.r. | 16 months | Chemical hepatitis (71 %), leukopenia (54 %), hair loss (43 %), thrombocytopenia (18 %), hemolysis/hematuria (57 %), gastroduodenal ulcer (7 %), death 8 % due to pancreatitis (4 %) and HAT (4 %) |
| Ku et al. [ | 1997 | 16 (16) | HCC (11), CRC (1), Breast CA (1), Melanoma (1) | Doxorubicin | Prospective | PHP | Hemodynamics, pharmacology, toxicity | n.r. | n.r. | n.r. | Chemical hepatitis (75 %), leukopenia (43.7 %), alopecia (37.5 %), thrombocytopenia (25 %), hemolysis/hematuria (50 %) |
| Ku et al. [ | 1995 | 15 (15) | HCC, unresectable (15) | Doxorubicin | Phase I | PHP | Hemodynamics, pharmacology, toxicity, response | 64 (9) | n.r. | 12 months for responders (vs 5 for non-responders) | Chemical hepatitis (71 %), leukopenia (67 %), alopecia (33 %), thrombocytopenia (40 %), hemolysis/hematuria (87 %), gastroduodenal ulcer (14 %), death 13.3 % due to pancreatitis (7 %) and HAT (7 %) |
| Ravikumar et al. [ | 1994 | 21 (58) | HCC (5), CRC (8), Melanoma (2), Sarcoma (4), Adrenal/Pancreatic/SCLC/CA ( | 5-FU, doxorubicin | Phase I | PHP | MTD, feasibility | 9.5 (2) | n.r. | n.r. | Hematologic, primarily leukopenia/neutropenia; transient hypotension (78.5 %) |
ORR objective response rate (complete plus partial response), NET neuroendocrine tumor, HCC hepatocellular carcinoma, CRC colorectal carcinoma, RCC renal cell carcinoma, AdrC adrenalcortical carcinoma, CA cholangiocarcinoma, SCLC small cell lung carcinoma, PA periampullary carcinoma, BCLC barcelona clinic liver criteria, n.r. not reported, hPFS hepatic progression-free survival, MTD maximum tolerated dose, HAT hepatic artery thrombosis
aOnly presented as an abstract
bDelcath system
cList is not extensive, mortality and common complications are reported
dNot reported in the abstract
eComplication rates are quoted per PHP at MTD
Ω57.1 % of patients in control group crossed over to PHP
Fig. 1Hepatic vascular mapping in a 63-year-old female with bilateral hepatic metastases from ocular melanoma. A Angiographic images from the celiac trunk show a right gastric artery (asterisk) originating from the left hepatic artery (white arrow). B In the late arterial phase, two hypervascular metastases in the right liver lobe (white arrows) are seen as well as the falciform artery (arrowheads). A treatment plan was made to perform PHP with selective infusion of melphalan chloride into the left hepatic artery (LHA) and right hepatic artery (dotted arrow in A) with preemptive coiling of the right gastric (RGA) and falciform artery (FA). C Selective angiography from the LHA shows the FA (white arrowheads) to be originating from the segment four artery (white arrows). The RGA is also depicted (black arrowheads). D Selective angiography of the FA (long white arrow) shows opacification of the right internal thoracic artery (black arrow) through the ensiform artery (dotted arrow) and of anterior abdominal wall arteries (short white arrows). E Antegrade catheterization of the RGA was unsuccessful and therefore, retrograde catheterization was performed via the left gastric artery (LGA) using a 2.4-F microcatheter (black arrowheads). Angiography shows the RGA (white arrowheads) and LHA (white arrow). F Angiography of the LHA (white arrow) after successful coiling of the FA (dotted arrow) and RGA (black arrow) with 2-mm detachable microcoils. Some reflux of contrast is seen in right hepatic artery branches (short white arrows). G Axial CT image in portovenous phase before treatment demonstrates two hepatic metastases (white arrowheads). A third metastasis was seen in segment 4B (not shown). In the left liver lobe a cyst is seen (black arrowhead) as well as a hypodensity caused by previous laparoscopic excisional biopsy (black arrow). H CT in portovenous phase after two cycles of PHP shows marked reduction in size of the right liver lobe metastasis. The other two metastases showed a complete radiological response after treatment
Fig. 2Schematic display of the setup of percutaneous hepatic perfusion. Chemotherapeutic drugs are infused through a catheter placed in the hepatic artery (arrowhead) and the effluent chemosaturated blood returning through the hepatic veins is aspirated through the side holes of the double-balloon catheter. An extracorporeal system with carbon activated filters is used to separate the chemotherapeutics from the blood, before the blood is returned through a sheath in the internal jugular vein
Fig. 3Same patient as in Fig. 1. Postero-anterior (A) and lateral (B) images during venography performed by hand injection of non-diluted contrast medium through the size holes of the double-balloon catheter. The cranial balloon (dotted white arrow) was positioned at the atriocaval junction to prevent flow to the right atrium (white arrowheads). The caudal balloon (white arrow) prevented retrograde flow to the infrarenal inferior vena cava. A microcatheter (black arrow) was placed through a 5-F celiac catheter and into the left hepatic artery for the infusion of melphalan chloride. Both the right hepatic vein (open white arrow) and middle hepatic vein (black arrowhead) were opacified. Also, a nasogastric tube is seen (dotted black arrow)
Fig. 4Hepatic vascular mapping and PHP in a 44-year-old female with bilateral hepatic metastases from ocular melanoma. A Angiography from the celiac trunk showed the gastroduodenal artery (GDA) (dotted black arrow), the right gastric artery (RGA) (dotted white arrow), a segment 3 artery (S3) (black arrowhead) originating from the left hepatic artery and a segment 2 artery (S2) (black arrow) originating from the left gastric artery (white arrowhead). B After coil embolization of the GDA (black arrow), RGA (asterisk) and aberrant left hepatic artery (open white arrow), redistribution of flow to S2 (arrowheads) was established through intrahepatic collaterals. C Multiple hypervascular tumors are seen in both lobes (arrowheads). D After inflation of the cranial (black arrow) and caudal (white arrow) balloon of the double-balloon catheter, the inferior caval vein (open black arrow) and right hepatic vein (white open arrow) were opacified during venography. No leakage was demonstrated alongside the balloons. E Angiography with a microcatheter positioned in the proper hepatic artery showed opacification of all hepatic arteries, including the right hepatic artery (white arrow), S2 (open black arrow), and S3 (open white arrow), just prior to infusion of melphalan chloride. F At the start of the second PHP 6 weeks later, angiography shows complete disappearance of staining of the liver metastases. Follow-up CT and PET/CT (not shown) after two PHP procedures revealed three small residual tumors that were subsequently treated with RFA. The patient remained without evidence of disease until 1 year after the first PHP
Summary of ongoing prospective studies on percutaneous hepatic perfusion
| Study design | Type of hepatic malignancy | Initiation | Treatment | Estimated enrollment | End-points | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phase II, single center | Ocular melanoma | Investigatora | PHP with melphalan. 2 cycles | 20 | ORR, post-PHP resectability safety, OS, HPFS, PFS, QoL | Recruiting |
| Phase III, multicenter | Ocular melanoma | Industryb | PHP with melphalan. Max 6 cycles versus BAC (dacarbazine, TACE, ipilimumab or pembrolizumab) | 240 | OS, PFS, ORR, HPFS, hepatic ORR, QoL | Launching fourth quarter 2015 |
| Phase II, single center | Colorectal carcinoma | Investigatora | PHP with melphalan. 2 cycles | 34 | ORR, post-PHP resectability safety, OS, HPFS, PFS, QoL | Recruiting |
| Phase II, multicenter | HCC or ICC | Industryb | PHP with melphalan. 2 Cycles | 42 | ORR, safety, PFS | Recruiting |
| Phase II, multicenter | HCC | Industryb | PHP with melphalan. 3 cycles, followed by sorafenib | 31 | Adverse events, ORR, PFS, pharmacokinetics, QoL | Recruiting |
| Phase I/II | HCC | Investigatorc | PHP followed by sorafenib | 30 | PFS, OS, safety | Recruiting |
HCC hepatocellular carcinoma, ICC intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma, BAC best alternative care, TACE transarterial chemoembolization, ORR objective response rate, OS overall survival, HPFS hepatic progression-free survival, PFS progression-free survival, QoL quality of life
aLeiden University Medical Center, the Netherlands
bDelcath Systems Inc. USA
cKobe University, Japan