Background: The significance of repeat hepatectomy for recurrent hepatocellular carcinoma remains controversial. Therefore the aim of this study was to reevaluate both the survival and the surgical risks of repeat hepatectomy.
Methods: The significance of repeat hepatectomy including the survival and the surgical risks for recurrent hepatocellular carcinoma were investigated with 21 patients who underwent a curative repeat hepatectomy during the period between May 1975 and July 1993. For a comparison of survival, 253 patients who underwent a curative primary hepatectomy during the period between April 1985 and July 1993 were used. Moreover, the preoperative liver function tests were also compared between the first and second hepatectomies.
Results: Regarding the preoperative liver function tests, the indocyanine green dye excretion rate at 15 minutes in the second hepatectomy (18.7% +/- 8.7%) was significantly higher than that in the first hepatectomy (14.7% +/- 5.9%). With regard to the surgical risks, there was no difference in the clinical parameters for blood loss, operation time, and the incidence of postoperative complications between the first and second hepatectomies. The postoperative hospital stay for the second hepatectomies was relatively shorter than that for the first hepatectomies. In addition, the patient's survival and disease-free survival after a curative repeat hepatectomy were almost identical to that after a curative primary hepatectomy.
Conclusions: A curative repeat hepatectomy is thus considered to be the most effective therapeutic modality for recurrent hepatocellular carcinoma.