Placement of a long tapered side-hole catheter in the hepatic artery: technical advantages, catheter stability, and arterial patency.
Objective: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the technical advantages, safety, and efficacy of placing a catheter distally in the hepatic artery using a long tapered side-hole catheter with an implantable port for hepatic arterial infusion chemotherapy.
Methods: Fifty patients with unresectable malignant liver tumors underwent radiologic implantation of catheter-port systems using the long tapered catheter placement method. A 2.7-French distal shaft of the catheter was inserted distally in the hepatic artery with its side hole located proximally, and a 5-French proximal shaft was placed in the aorta; the catheter tip was not fixed. Technical success, complications including catheter stability and hepatic artery patency, and tumor response were assessed and compared with the following two historical controls: 35 patients with a 5-French catheter inserted simply in the hepatic artery (conventional method), and 131 patients with a 5-French catheter, the tip of which was fixed in the gastroduodenal artery (the fixed-catheter-tip method).
Results: The technical success rate using the long tapered catheter placement method was 92% (46/50 patients), whereas the feasibility of the fixed-catheter-tip method was confined to 79% of historical controls (131/166 patients). Among patients in whom the gastroduodenal artery was present, a decreased frequency of gastroduodenal artery embolization was seen using the long tapered catheter placement method (39%; 17/44 patients) compared with the conventional method (p = 0.0112) and the fixed-catheter-tip method (p < 0.0001). Cumulative stability rates of the catheter (6 months, 94.9%; 1 year, 94.9%; 2 years, 86.2%) and cumulative patency rates of the hepatic artery (6 months, 89.9%; 1 year, 89.9%; 2 years, 83.5%) were significantly higher using the long tapered catheter placement method than using the conventional method (p = 0.0208 and p = 0.0066, respectively) but were similar to those using the fixed-catheter-tip method. The time of hepatic tumor progression was significantly longer using the long tapered catheter placement method than using the conventional method (p = 0.0299) but was comparable to the time using the fixed-catheter-tip method.
Conclusions: The long tapered catheter placement method should find wider application in hepatic arterial infusion chemotherapy because it is useful in preventing catheter dislodgment and hepatic artery occlusion.