학술논문

Technical and Clinical Outcomes of Laparoscopic–Laparotomic Hepatocellular Carcinoma Thermal Ablation with Microwave Technology: Case Series and Review of Literature.
Document Type
Article
Source
Cancers. Jan2024, Vol. 16 Issue 1, p92. 13p.
Subject
*RADIO frequency therapy
*LAPAROSCOPIC surgery
*MICROWAVES
*CATHETER ablation
*RETROSPECTIVE studies
*TREATMENT effectiveness
*LIVER diseases
*ABDOMINAL surgery
*DESCRIPTIVE statistics
*HOSPITAL care
*TECHNOLOGY
*LITERATURE reviews
*HEPATOCELLULAR carcinoma
*ABLATION techniques
Language
ISSN
2072-6694
Abstract
Simple Summary: Although the percutaneous approach has always been the standard to ablate hepatocellular carcinomas (HCCs), both intraoperative laparoscopic and laparotomic approaches have recently demonstrated viability in patients unfit for hepatic resection or percutaneous ablation. Most published papers are based on radiofrequency technology performed with a laparoscopic approach, and the literature lacks up-to-date data on laparotomic microwave ablations. This study discusses the efficacy and safety of intraoperative ablation of HCC with state-of-the-art microwave technology in both laparoscopic and laparotomic fashions, demonstrating high clinical success rates and rare complications for intraoperative HCC ablation unsuitable for a percutaneous treatment, strengthening its performance with microwave technology. Moreover, for the first time in literature, both laparoscopic and laparotomic fashions are reported altogether. Purpose: To evaluate technical and clinical outcomes of intraoperative (laparoscopic/laparotomic) microwave ablation on HCC. Materials and Methods: This is a retrospective single-center study evaluating consecutive patients treated for very early/early-stage HCC with intraoperative microwave ablation from 1 July 2017 to 30 June 2023. In these patients, a percutaneous US-guided approach was excluded due to the nodule's suboptimal visibility or harmful location and liver resection for a deep position or adherences. Data about the clinical stage, surgical approach, liver pathology and nodules characteristics, technical success, complications, and follow-up were collected. Technical success was intended as the absence of locoregional persistence at follow-up CT/MRI controls. Results: A total of 36 cirrhotic patients (M:F = 30:6, median age 67 years) were enrolled; 18/36 (50%) had a single nodule, 13/36 (36%) had two, 4/36 had three (11%), and 1/36 had four (3%). Among the patients, 24 (67%) were treated with laparoscopy, and 12/36 (33%) with a laparotomic approach. Sixty HCCs of 16.5 mm (6–50 mm) were treated for 7 min (2–30 min) with 100 W of power. A total of 55 nodules (92%) were treated successfully and showed no residual enhancement at the first postoperative follow-up; the other 5/60 (8%) underwent chemo/radioembolization. There was one complication (3%): a biliary fistula treated with percutaneous drainage and glue embolization. The average hospital stay was 3.5 days (1–51 days), and patients were followed up on average for 238 days (13–1792 days). During follow-up, 5/36 patients (14%) underwent liver transplantation, 1/36 (2%) died during hospitalization and 1 after discharge. Conclusions: Laparoscopic/laparotomic intraoperative HCC MW ablation is feasible in patients unsuitable for percutaneous approach or hepatic resection, with rare complications and with good technical and clinical outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]