Treatment of primary liver cancer
- 27 November 2003
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in British Journal of Surgery
- Vol. 164 (8) , 569-574
- https://doi.org/10.1080/110241598750005651
Abstract
Objective: To evaluate treatment of patients with primary liver cancer. Design: Prospective protocol including subsets of randomised studies. Setting: University hospital, Sweden. Subjects: 123 patients with primary liver cancer. Interventions: 64 patients underwent hepatic resection, 25 were included in a trial of adjuvant chemotherapy. 24 further patients whose tumours were not resectable were included in a trial of intra‐arterial infusion of doxorubicin. Main outcome measures: Survival and postoperative morbidity. Results: The median survival time for patients who had had resections was 11 months (range 0–111). Twelve per cent survived more than 5 years. No prognostic factor had any significant effect on outcome. The postoperative mortality was 11% (7/64). The patients allocated to adjuvant chemotherapy survived a median of 10 months (range 1–47) and the controls 29 months (range 8–111) (p = 0.04). Patients with unresectable liver cancer treated with intra‐arterial doxorubicin lived no longer than untreated controls (median 8 months (range 1–56) compared with 7 months (range 1–28)). Conclusions: Treatment of patients with primary liver cancer is still an unsolved problem. Adjuvant chemotherapy with doxorubicin had no beneficial effect on survival. Copyright © 1998 Taylor and Francis Ltd.Keywords
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