Background: Although retrospective studies have demonstrated survival benefit from hepatectomy for metastatic colorectal cancer, few studies have examined patients with multiple bilobar metastases to identify survival-related factors throughout their course.
Methods: Among 277 patients with R0 resection for liver metastases from colorectal cancer, 79 patients had 4 or more lesions in a bilobar distribution. To determine impact on long-term outcome, we compared clinicopathologic factors retrospectively between 3-year survivors and patients who died less than 3 years after hepatectomy.
Results: Among 79 patients with 4 or more bilobar metastases, 5 patients (6.3%) attained prolonged remission after initial hepatectomy. By multivariate analysis, a lack of adjuvant chemotherapy compromised survival (relative risk or RR, 2.21; P = .036), as did prehepatectomy carcinoembryonic antigen exceeding 12 ng/mL (RR, 2.12; P = .039). Treatment-related variables such as repeat resections in the event of liver recurrence (P < .01) or lung metastases (P < .05), as well as adjuvant chemotherapy (P < .01), differed significantly between 3-year survivors and nonsurvivors, as did the differences in number of metastases, maximum size of metastases, concomitant extrahepatic metastases at the time of initial hepatectomy, and disease-free interval preceding initial recurrence.
Conclusions: Although not effective as a sole treatment for multiple hepatic metastases of colorectal cancer, liver resection is important in multimodal therapy. Reoperations for recurrence of metastases, followed by additional chemotherapy, frequently obtained long survival.