Little is known about the effectiveness of transcatheter chemotherapy in liver metastases from gastric cancer. The aim of
this study was to evaluate the initial results of hepatic artery infusion and oily chemoembolization in these liver secondaries.
Courses of transcatheter arterial infusion with 5-fluorouracil/doxorubicin (12 patients) and oily chemoembolization with doxorubicin-in-iodized
oil and gelatin sponge (12 patients) were performed in 24 patients with histologically proven unresectable gastric cancer
liver metastases. A positive effect of treatment (partial response + stabilization) was seen in 92% of the patients after
chemoinfusion and in 50% after chemoembolization. The 1- and 2-year actuarial survival rates were 92% and 53% for infusion
vs 50% and 17% for chemoembolization, respectively (log-rank test,
P = 0.0009). For patients who had already died, the mean survival was 19.2 months vs 9.5 months (Student's
t-test,
P < 0.05) with median survivals of 23 months vs 8 months, respectively. The results with arterial infusion were very close
to those reported for liver resection. Transcatheter therapy appears to be useful for the palliation of unresectable liver
metastases from gastric cancer. If regional chemotherapy is used, arterial infusion should be the first-choice treatment,
with oily chemoembolization being reserved for patients who do not respond to infusion.
Key words: gastric cancer - liver neoplasms - secondary - interventional radiology - chemotherapy - chemoembolization - therapeutic
Received: February 22, 2000 / Accepted: July 28, 2000