Background: The prognosis of ruptured hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is generally poor, but few studies have focused on the analysis of prognostic factors of this catastrophic event.
Methods: Eighty-four consecutive patients with ruptured HCC were included. Twenty-nine clinical and laboratory variables were correlated to prognosis by using uni- and multivariate analyses.
Results: Epigastralgia and/or right upper quadrant abdominal pain was the most common initial presentation (70%), followed by shock (42%), abdominal distension (27%) and others (17%). Of these 84 patients, 50 patients were treated by supportive measure, 21 by operation and 13 by transcatheter arterial embolization (TAE). The median survival was 13, 30 and 202 days in each group, respectively, and 24 days overall. TAE showed the lowest hemostatic failure rate (20%). Univariate analysis showed that active treatment (operation or TAE), group I tumor with a solitary nodule or single nodule with proliferation into surrounding area, serum creatinine (< or = 1.2 mg/ml), alkaline phosphatase (< or = 95 U/L), alanine aminotransferase (ALT, < or = 40 U/L), total bilirubin (< or = 1.6 mg/ml), initial systolic blood pressure (> or = 90 mmHg), and absence of main portal vein thrombosis were correlated with a survival longer than 90 days (p < 0.05) in univariate analysis. Active treatment, ALT level and initial systolic blood pressure were still significant in multivariate analysis (p < 0.05).
Conclusions: TAE may help stop the tumor bleeding. Treatment regimen, ALT levels and initial blood pressure are correlated with the prognosis of ruptured HCC.