Background/aims: In this report, risk factors of intrahepatic recurrence of a large solitary hepatocellular carcinoma after combination therapy with transcatheter arterial embolization followed by percutaneous ethanol injection were studied.
Methodology: The series included 61 patients with an unresectable large solitary hepatocellular carcinoma, the largest size of which was greater than 3 cm in diameter. All patients completely responded to combination therapy and recurrence rates were determined. The following parameters; age, sex, hepatitis B virus surface antigen, hepatitis C virus antibodies, Child's classification, alcohol abuse, alanine aminotransferase, aspartate aminotransferase, alpha-fetoprotein, indocyanine green retention rate, hepatocellular carcinoma size, hepatocellular carcinoma capsule, total amount of injected ethanol and the alpha-fetoprotein 1 month after treatment were evaluated.
Results: The 1-, 3-, and 5-year cancer-free survival rates of all patients were calculated to be 61%, 23%, and 13%, respectively. Among pretreatment parameters, the log-rank test and subsequent Cox's proportional hazards model showed that a tumor size of more than 5 cm in diameter was independently associated with recurrence. The posttreatment parameters of total amount of injected ethanol was also shown to be significantly related to recurrence by the log-rank test.
Conclusions: Lesions more than 5 cm in diameter and insufficient injected ethanol were associated with intrahepatic recurrence after this combination therapy.