Inspiration of liver resection for hepatocellular carcinoma associated with hepatic vein invasion, not inferior vena cava invasion
Editorial

Inspiration of liver resection for hepatocellular carcinoma associated with hepatic vein invasion, not inferior vena cava invasion

Nam-Joon Yi

Department of Surgery, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea

Correspondence to: Nam-Joon Yi. Department of Surgery, Seoul National University College of Medicine, 101 Daehak-ro, Jongro-gu Seoul 03080, Korea. Email: gsleenj@hanmail.net.

Provenance: This is an invited Editorial commissioned by Editor-in-Chief Yilei Mao (Department of Liver Surgery, Peking Union Medical College Hospital, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, Beijing, China).

Comment on: Kokudo T, Hasegawa K, Matsuyama Y, et al. Liver resection for hepatocellular carcinoma associated with hepatic vein invasion: A Japanese nationwide survey. Hepatology 2017;66:510-7.


Submitted Jun 27, 2018. Accepted for publication Jul 24, 2018.

doi: 10.21037/hbsn.2018.07.02


The treatment for advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) has been limited to transarterial chemoembolization (TACE) or medical therapy as a palliative treatment. Patients with HCC that grossly invades the portal or hepatic vein have a limited life span. Thus, the current Barcelona Clinic for Liver Cancer (BCLC) staging system recommends systemic therapy with sorafenib (1). However, several papers (2-5) have reported their results of TACE, hepatic resection, or transplantation in patients with macroscopic vascular invasion (MVI), especially portal vein tumor thrombus (PVTT). The treatment for HCC with MVI is still under debate.

Meanwhile, because of the rarity of hepatic vein tumor thrombus (HVTT), compared to PTTV, only a few papers (6-9) have reported surgical outcomes focused on HVTT (Table 1). Several other studies (12,13) dealt with the surgical outcomes of patients with HCC and PVTT and/or inferior vena cava tumor thrombus (IVCTT), as well as HVTT. PVTT and IVCTT are well known as comprising aggressive tumor biology and resulting in poor outcomes. Thus, the analysis that focused on the prognosis of surgical outcomes of patients with HCC and HVTT was difficult in these studies.

Table 1
Table 1 Studies of resection of HCC in patients with HVTT
Full table

Four years ago, Kokudo et al. (7) conducted a single-center study of surgical resection of HCC in patients with HVTT. In their report, they showed excellent outcomes of 153 patients resulting in a 90-day mortality rate of 5% and a median survival time of 5.27 years. The risk factors for overall survival were IVCTT and R1/2 resection. However, it was a retrospective single-arm study, and the cohort was small.

Recently, the same coauthors, Kokudo et al. (11), retrospectively analyzed the impact of hepatic resection in Child-Pugh class A patients with HCC and HVTT through Japanese nationwide survey. This time, the authors wisely solved several issues raised in the previous study: a case-control study via a 1:1 propensity-matching nonsurgical control group, collecting a large cohort number via a nationwide survey considering the rarity of HVTT. They proved again the excellent survival outcomes in the resection group compared to those in the non-resection group; the median survival time after resection was longer than that after nonsurgical treatment (3.42 vs. 1.81 years, retrospectively) and a 90-day mortality rate of 3.4%. In both the resection and non-resection groups, high-risk patients for hepatic resection were included: those who were elderly (median age, 66.3 vs. 67.5 years), exhibited portal hypertension (gastroesophageal varices, 13.5% vs. 11.7%), and were accompanied PVTT (40.4% vs. 40.4%). In addition, they suggested the risk factors that are associated with poor overall survival after resection: combined PVTT, multiple tumors (≥3), varices, and poor cancer cell differentiation. In this study, they excluded patients with IVCTT, which had been a risk factor of survival in the previous study (7), from a comparison between the surgical and nonsurgical control groups and from multivariate risk factor analysis of the resection group. Therefore, resection of these tumors with IVCTT may not be justified, given the poor outcomes and a high 90-day mortality rate.

Although this study inspirited clinicians who manage these patients with advanced HCC and HVTT, several unanswered, critical questions are as follows. First, this study was based on a nationwide survey, rather than on concrete data. For this reason, they could not provide detailed surgical data, as well as tips and pitfalls of resection, like en bloc resection, total exclusion/Pringle maneuver, or pulmonary protection against tumor embolus. Second, the definition of the presence of MVI was determined by the radiologic findings. In addition, they did not report pathologic differentiation of tumors, even though poor cancer cell differentiation was one of the risk factors for overall survival. Third, this study represented the Japanese characteristics of HCC, of which more than half of the original liver diseases were hepatitis C-related. This study might follow the previous version of Japanese regulations for HCC (14), in which the indications of surgery and other nonsurgical treatment may be different from those in Western and other Asian countries. Finally, the period of this study was before sorafenib application in Japan. For this reason, a future study regarding the comparison between outcomes of hepatic resection and sorafenib for HCC and HVTT is expected.

This study suggested a great deal of hope for patients with advanced HCC involving HVTT, as well as for clinicians who manage these patients, although the results were probably affected by selection bias for better tumor biology and less difficult situations (location and reserved liver function) for surgery. Recent development of novel immunotherapies and/or target therapies may be helpful in the future (15), by adding neoadjuvant and/or adjuvant therapy to improve recurrence-free survival rates in patients who exhibit successful local control by liver resection, but show systemic recurrence or intrahepatic metastasis.


Acknowledgements

None.


Footnote

Conflicts of Interest: The author has no conflicts of interest to declare.


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Cite this article as: Yi NJ. Inspiration of liver resection for hepatocellular carcinoma associated with hepatic vein invasion, not inferior vena cava invasion. Hepatobiliary Surg Nutr 2018;7(5):392-394. doi: 10.21037/hbsn.2018.07.02

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