Back to Search Start Over

Surgery versus intra-arterial therapy for neuroendocrine liver metastasis: a multicenter international analysis

Authors :
Skye C. Mayo
Luca Aldrighetti
Jayme B. Stokes
Timothy M. Pawlik
Michael A. Choti
Jennifer Strub
Srinevas K. Reddy
David Arrese
Bryan M. Clary
Lorenzo Capussotti
Mechteld C. de Jong
Mark Bloomston
Carlo Pulitano
Todd W. Bauer
Charles A. Staley
Jean Francois H. Geschwind
Carrie K. Chu
T. Clark Gamblin
Richard D. Schulick
Reid B. Adams
Scott Celinski
Gilles Mentha
David A. Kooby
Alessandro Ferrero
Mayo, Sc
de Jong, Mc
Bloomston, M
Pulitano, C
Clary, Bm
Reddy, Sk
Gamblin, Tc
Celinski, Sa
Kooby, Da
Staley, Ca
Stokes, Jb
Chu, Ck
Arrese, D
Ferrero, A
Schulick, Rd
Choti, Ma
Geschwind, Jfh
Strub, J
Bauer, Tw
Adams, Rb
Aldrighetti, L
Mentha, G
Capussotti, L
Pawlik, Tm
Source :
Annals of Surgical Oncology, Vol. 18, No 13 (2011) pp. 3657-65
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

Management of patients with neuroendocrine liver metastasis (NELM) remains controversial. We sought to examine the relative efficacy of surgical management versus intra-arterial therapy (IAT) for NELM and determine factors predictive of survival. A total of 753 patients who had surgery (n = 339) or IAT (n = 414) for NELM from 1985 to 2010 were identified from nine hepatobiliary centers. Clinicopathologic data were assessed with regression modeling and propensity score matching. Most patients had a pancreatic (32%) or a small bowel (27%) primary tumor; 47% had a hormonally active tumor. There were statistically significant differences in characteristics between surgery versus IAT groups (hormonally active tumors: 28 vs. 48%; hepatic tumor burden > 25%: 52% vs. 76%) (all P < 0.001). Among surgical patients, most underwent hepatic resection alone without ablation (78%). The median number of IAT treatments was 1 (range, 1-4). Median and 5-year survival of patients treated with surgery was 123 months and 74% vs. 34 months and 30% for IAT (P < 0.001). In the propensity-adjusted multivariate Cox model, asymptomatic disease (hazard ratio 2.6) was strongly associated with worse outcome (P = 0.001). Although surgical management provided a survival benefit over IAT among symptomatic patients with > 25% hepatic tumor involvement, there was no difference in long-term outcome after surgery versus IAT among asymptomatic patients (P = 0.78). Asymptomatic patients with a large (> 25%) burden of liver disease benefited least from surgical management and IAT may be a more appropriate treatment strategy. Surgical management of NELM should be reserved for patients with low-volume disease or for those patients with symptomatic high-volume disease.

Details

ISSN :
15344681 and 10689265
Volume :
18
Issue :
13
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of surgical oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b64fcd97ebb7ebe90486e54fa01d9e37