Background
There is no clear consensus regarding the best treatment strategy for patients with advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC).
Methods
Patients with cirrhosis and HCC beyond Milan who had undergone liver resection (LR) or primary orthotopic liver transplantation
(OLT) between November 1995 and December 2005 were included in this study. Pathological tumor staging was based on the American
Liver Tumor Study Group modified Tumor-Node-Metastasis classification.
Results
A total of 23 HCC patients were primarily treated by means of LR, 5 of whom eventually underwent salvage OLT. An additional
32 patients underwent primary OLT. The overall actuarial survival rates at 3 and 5 years were 35% after LR, and 69% and 60%,
respectively, after primary OLT. Recurrence-free survival at 5 years was significantly higher after OLT (65%) than after LR
(26%). Of the patients who underwent LR, 11 (48%) experienced HCC recurrence only in the liver; 6 of these 11 presented with
advanced HCC recurrence, poor medical status, or short disease-free intervals and were not considered for transplantation.
Salvage OLT was performed in 5 patients with early stage recurrence (45% of patients with hepatic recurrence after LR and
22% of all patients who underwent LR). At a median of 18 months after salvage OLT, all 5 patients are alive, 4 are free of
disease, and 1 developed HCC recurrence 16 months after salvage OLT.
Conclusion
For patients with HCC beyond Milan criteria, multimodality treatment—including LR, salvage OLT, and primary OLT—results in
long-term survival in half of the patients. When indicated, LR can optimize the use of scarce donor organs by leaving OLT
as a reserve option for early stage HCC recurrence.