Preoperative Balloon-Occluded Transcatheter Arterial Chemoembolization Followed by Surgical Resection: Pathological Evaluation of Necrosis

Diseases. 2023 Oct 24;11(4):149. doi: 10.3390/diseases11040149.

Abstract

This study investigates the clinical and pathological outcomes of preoperative balloon-occluded transcatheter arterial chemoembolization (B-TACE) in patients with single hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). The data are from 25 consecutive patients who underwent sequential treatment of subsegmental B-TACE and hepatic surgery for single HCC. Radiological and pathological evaluation of oily subsegmentectomy, defined as the iodized oil-laden necrotic area that includes the entire HCC and surrounding liver parenchyma, were performed. Subsegmental B-TACE was technically successful in all patients. The major and minor complication rates were 8% and 24%, respectively. On the first follow-up computed tomography (CT), oily subsegmentectomy was observed in 18 (72%) out of 25 patients. Apart from one patient showing a partial response, the remaining 24 (96%) patients showed a complete response. Pathological complete necrosis of the HCC was observed in 18 (72%) out of 25 patients with complete or extensive necrosis of the peritumoral liver parenchyma. The remaining seven patients without peritumoral parenchymal necrosis had extensive necrosis of the HCCs. In conclusion, preoperative B-TACE can be a safe and effective method for the treatment of single HCC and a good bridge treatment for subsequent surgical resection. In addition, oily subsegmentectomy itself on the CT can be a good predictor of pathological complete necrosis of the HCC. The findings obtained from this study would provide a potential role of B-TACE in the treatment strategy for single HCC.

Keywords: balloon occlusion; chemoembolization; hepatocellular carcinoma; liver; tumor necrosis.

Grants and funding

This research received no external funding.