| Literature DB >> 31439956 |
Kenji Kuwaki1, Kazuhiro Nouso2,3, Manabi Miyashita4, Yasuhiro Makino4, Hiroaki Hagihara5, Akio Moriya6, Takuya Adachi2, Nozomu Wada2, Yuki Yasunaka2, Tetsuya Yasunaka2, Yasuto Takeuchi2, Hideki Onishi2, Shinichiro Nakamura2, Fusao Ikeda2, Hidenori Shiraha2, Akinobu Takaki2, Hiroyuki Okada2.
Abstract
Steroids are often administered at the time of transcatheter arterial chemoembolization (TACE), a standard treatment of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), with the expectation of preventing postembolization syndrome. Here we investigated the precise effects of steroids on TACE. We prospectively enrolled 144 HCC patients from 10 hospitals who underwent TACE. Three hospitals used steroids (steroid group, n=77) and the rest did not routinely use steroids (control group, n=67). The occurrence of adverse events and the algetic degree at 1-5 days post-treatment were compared between the groups. Fever (grades 0-2) after TACE was significantly less in the steroid group (56/21/0) compared to the control group (35/29/3, p=0.005, Cochran-Armitage test for trend). The suppressive effect of steroids against fever was prominent in females (p=0.001). Vomiting (G0/G1/ G2-) was also less frequent in the steroid group (70/5/2) versus the control group (53/10/3), but not significantly (p=0.106). The algetic degree and the grade of hematological adverse events, including hyperglycemia, did not differ between the groups. We conclude that the administration of steroids was useful for the prevention of adverse events after TACE in patients with HCC.Entities:
Keywords: antipyretic; hepatocellular carcinoma; steroid; therapeutic chemoembolization
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31439956 DOI: 10.18926/AMO/56935
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Med Okayama ISSN: 0386-300X Impact factor: 0.892