| Literature DB >> 33844146 |
Luca Vigano1,2, Jacopo Galvanin1,2, Dario Poretti3, Daniele Del Fabbro1, Damiano Gentile1,2, Vittorio Pedicini3, Luigi Solbiati3,2, Guido Torzilli4,5.
Abstract
Standard treatment of early recurrence of colorectal liver metastases (CLM) after liver resection (LR) is chemotherapy followed by loco-regional therapy. We reviewed the outcome of a different strategy ("test-of-time" approach): upfront percutaneous ablation without chemotherapy. Twenty-six consecutive patients with early solitary liver-only recurrence amenable to both resection and ablation (< 30 mm, distant from vessels) undergone "test-of-time" approach were analyzed. Early recurrence had a median size of 17 mm and occurred after a median interval from LR of 4 months. Primary efficacy rate of ablation was 100%. Five patients are alive and disease-free after a mean follow-up of 46 months. Five patients had local-only recurrence; all had repeat treatment (LR = 4; Ablation = 1) without chemotherapy. Local recurrence risk was associated with incomplete ablation of 1-cm thick peritumoral margin. The remaining 16 patients had non-local recurrence, 13 early after ablation. Overall, six (23%) patients had ablation as unique treatment and 13 (50%) avoided or postponed chemotherapy (mean chemotherapy-free interval 33.5 months). Ablation without chemotherapy of early liver-only recurrence is a reliable "test-of-time" approach. It minimized the invasiveness of treatment with good effectiveness and high salvageability in case of local failure, avoided worthless surgery, and saved chemotherapy for further disease progression.Entities:
Keywords: Liver resection for colorectal liver metastases; Local recurrence; Microwave ablation; Radiofrequency ablation; Salvage surgery; Tumor biology
Year: 2021 PMID: 33844146 DOI: 10.1007/s13304-021-01047-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Updates Surg ISSN: 2038-131X