1. [Two Cases of Effective Hepatic Arterial Infusion Chemotherapy for Liver Metastases of Colon Cancer Resistant to Systemic Chemotherapy]
- Author
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Yusaku, Date, Toru, Hisaka, Kenjiro, Takahashi, Goichi, Nakayama, Masanori, Akashi, Ryuichi, Kawahara, Hisamune, Sakai, Hiroto, Ishikawa, Masafumi, Yasunaga, Shinji, Uchida, Hiroyuki, Horiuchi, Koji, Okuda, Mototsugu, Matsunaga, Keisuke, Miwa, and Yoshito, Akagi
- Subjects
Male ,Drug Resistance, Neoplasm ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,Colonic Neoplasms ,Liver Neoplasms ,Humans ,Infusions, Intra-Arterial ,Middle Aged ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,Colectomy ,Aged - Abstract
A 69-year-old man underwent right hemicolectomy for ascending colon cancer with liver metastases. Postoperative systemic chemotherapy did not reduce the metastases, and therefore, hepatic arterial infusion chemotherapy (HAI) was administered. The metastases decreased in size after 26 rounds of therapy, and the patient underwent resection. He is recurrence-free 63 months after the primary operation. A 57-year-old man underwent Hartmann's operation for sigmoid colon cancer with liver metastases. He underwent hepatic left lobe resection after metastases reduction by systemic chemotherapy. However, multiple liver metastases were detected 2 months later. Because the disease progressed despite the administration of systemic chemotherapy, HAI was utilized instead. The metastases decreased in size remarkably, and resection was performed. The patient is surviving 52 months after the primary operation while being continuously treated with HAI, resection, and systemic chemotherapy for re-recurrence. HAI is a potential alternative treatment for patients with colorectal liver metastases resistant to systemic chemotherapy.
- Published
- 2016