Objective: Haemobilia often results from iatrogenic injury caused by therapeutic procedures. The objective of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of early diagnosis of haemobilia based on ultrasonography in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma undergoing percutaneous ethanol injection.
Patients and methods: A combination retrospective and prospective study on the early detection of haemobilia caused by percutaneous ethanol injection was conducted on 365 patients in 1995-1996. The retrospective study reviewed the clinical, laboratory and imaging data of 172 patients who had undergone ethanol injection therapy in 1995. The results showed that ultrasonographic changes in the gallbladder, namely the rapid appearance of echogenic material in the gallbladder lumen, are a useful early sign of haemobilia. Based on the results of the retrospective study, a prospective study on the early detection of haemobilia was carried out in 1996. In the prospective study, percutaneous ethanol injection was halted as soon as haemobilia was detected.
Results: The incidence of haemobilia in the prospective group (3.6%) was not different from that in the retrospective group (4.7%). However, the mean duration between percutaneous ethanol injection and diagnosis of haemobilia was only 0.3 +/- 0.2 days in the prospective group, compared with 2.8 +/- 2.1 days in the retrospective group (P < 0.001), and the mean duration of jaundice in the prospective group (4.3 days) was significantly shorter than in the retrospective group (40.0 days) (P< 0.05).
Conclusion: Early diagnosis of haemobilia based on ultrasonographic findings of the gallbladder lumen effectively reduces the severity of haemobilia-related complications due to immediate interruption of the interventional procedure.