Effectiveness of prehepatectomy intra-arterial chemotherapy for multiple bilobar colorectal cancer metastases to the liver: a clinicopathologic study of peritumoral vasculobiliary invasion.

Journal: Surgery
Published:
Abstract

Background: Consensus remains to be achieved concerning prehepatectomy neoadjuvant chemotherapy as a treatment strategy for multiple bilobar colorectal liver metastases, in part because the effect of prehepatectomy neoadjuvant chemotherapy has not been determined pathologically. We investigated the efficacy of prehepatectomy intra-arterial chemotherapy for multiple bilobar colorectal cancer metastases to the liver.

Methods: Clinicopathologic data for 37 consecutive patients with > or =5 bilobar liver metastases from colorectal cancer who underwent hepatectomy were analyzed retrospectively with respect to long-term outcome and histological findings in resected liver tumors.

Results: In the 15 patients receiving neodadjuvant chemotherapy (NEO+ group), liver metastases progressed in 2 patients, remained stable in 8 patients, responded more than 50% in 4 patients, and responded completely in 1 patient (combined response rate, 33.3%). Overall and hepatic recurrence-free survival tended to be higher in responders than in nonresponders ( P = .053). Microscopic invasion of the portal vein, hepatic vein, and bile ducts near liver tumors was less frequent according to use of neoadjuvant chemotherapy and responsiveness to the therapy (responders, 20.0%; patients not receiving neoadjuvant therapy [NEO-], 72.7%; P < .05). Such microscopic invasion independently predicted hepatic recurrence by multivariate analysis ( P = .011).

Conclusions: A neoadjuvant chemotherapy-associated decrease in microscopic vasculobiliary invasion by metastatic liver tumors was related to clinical response and favorable outcome.

Authors
Kuniya Tanaka, Hiroshi Shimada, Kaori Kubota, Michio Ueda, Itaru Endo, Hitoshi Sekido, Shinji Togo