4.4 Review

Non-colorectal liver metastases: A review of interventional and surgical treatment modalities

Journal

FRONTIERS IN SURGERY
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fsurg.2022.945755

Keywords

liver metastases; surgical oncology; interventional radiology; outcome; patient selection; highly specialized centers

Categories

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Liver metastases occur in the majority of patients with primary tumors, and the survival benefit of liver resection varies depending on the tumor type and biological aggressiveness. While colorectal and neuroendocrine liver metastases have good outcomes with resection, non-colorectal and non-neuroendocrine liver metastases have lower survival rates. Recent studies have shown significant improvements in outcomes with patient selection, surgical techniques, and risk score prediction. Therefore, it is no longer justified to deny liver resection for patients with non-colorectal, non-neuroendocrine liver metastases.
Liver metastases (LM) occur in up to 90% either simultaneously with the diagnosis of the primary tumor or at a later time-point. While resection of colorectal LM and resection or transplantation of neuroendocrine LM is part of a standard therapy with a 5-year patient survival of up to 80%, resection of non-colorectal and non-neuroendocrine LM is still discussed controversially. The reason for it is the significantly lower survival benefit of all different tumor entities depending on the biological aggressiveness of the tumor. Randomized controlled trials are lacking. However, reviews of case series with >= 100 liver resections are available. They show a 5-year patient survival of up to 42% compared to only <5% in patients without treatment. Risk factors for poor survival include the type of primary tumor, a short interval between resection of the primary tumor and liver resection, extrahepatic manifestation of the tumor, number and size of the LM, and extent of liver resection. Overall, it has recently been shown that a good patient selection, the technical advances in surgical therapy and the use of a risk score to predict the prognosis lead to a significantly better outcome so that it is no longer justified not to offer liver resection to patients with non-colorectal, non- endocrine LM. Since modern therapy of LM is multimodal, the optimal therapeutic approach is decided individually by a multidisciplinary team consisting of visceral surgeons, oncologists, interventional radiologists and radiologists as part of a tumor board.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.4
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available