CASE REPORT
A Case of Arborecent Liver Necrosis following Continuous Arterial Infusion Chemotherapy after Resection for Liver Metastases of Alpha-Fetoprotein-producing Gastric Cancer
Hideki Yamada, Michio Kanai, Hirotoshi Ogawa, Yoriyuki Nakamura, Yasuhiro Ohba, Katsura Hamaguchi, Keizo Kimura, Chulho Park, Kenichirou Sato and Takashi Yano
Department of Surgery Kasugai Municipal Hospital
A 61-year-old man underwent distal gastrectomy and partial hepatectomy September 30, 1998, for alpha-fetoprotein (AFP)-producing gastric cancer with liver metastasis (S4c+S8). Preoperative serum AFP was abnormally elevated at 5715 ng/ml. A catheter was placed in the common hepatic artery following the operation for continuous arterial chemotherapy to prevent residual liver recurrence. Epirubicin hydrochloride (20 mg on POD 20) and Fluorouracil (250mg/day, total of 40, 500mg) were infused. Nine months after the operation, an arborecent necrotic lesion resembling aseptic biloma due to tumor thrombi appeared in the right lobe, for which right hepatectomy was done July 8, 1999. Histlogical study showed liver necrosis caused by bile duct necrosis and bile leakage around Glisson's capsule. In this case, the inflammation due to bile leakage around Glisson's capsule because of continuous arterial infusion with 5-FU causes an arborecent liver necrosis and an occlusion of portal vein. He survived 2 year and 7 months without recurrence after the second operation.
Key words
AFP-producing gastric cancer, continuous intrahepatic arterial infusion chemotherapy with 5-FU, portal vein occlusion
Jpn J Gastroenterol Surg 34: 1532-1536, 2001
Reprint requests
Hideki Yamada Department of Surgery, Kasugai Municipal Hospital 1-1-1 Takagi-cho, Kasugai-si, 486-8510 JAPAN
Accepted
June 26, 2001
 |
To read the PDF file you will need Abobe Reader installed on your computer. |
|