1 Mar 2014Article
Elderly and very elderly patients with hepatocellular carcinoma. Strategy for a first line treatment
Stefania Brozzetti 1Mario Bezzi 2Giuseppe Sanctis 3Gian Andreoli 2Monica Angelis 1Michelangelo Miccini 1Francesca Galati 2Valentina Panetta 4Caterina Furlan 3Domenico Santis 1Giorgio Toma 1Adriano Tocchi 5
Affiliations
Article Info
1 Department of Surgery “P. Valdoni”, “Sapienza” University of Rome Medical School, Rome, Italy
2 Department of Radiology, “Sapienza” University of Rome Medical School, Rome, Italy
3 Department of Infectious and Tropical Disease, “Sapienza” University of Rome Medical School, Rome, Italy
4 L’altrastatistica s.r.l., Consultancy & Training, Biostatistics office, Rome, Italy
5 *Department of Surgery “P. Valdoni”, “Sapienza” University of Rome Medical School, Rome, Italy
Ann. Ital. Chir., 2014, 85(2), 120-128;
Published: 1 Mar 2014
Copyright © 2014 Annali Italiani di Chirurgia
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Abstract
AIM: Health-status of elderly patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) may limit surgical approach; other options are thus auspicable. METHODS: The authors reviewed 98 selected patients, aged 65 to 90 years, with 149 HCC treated between 2002 and 2011. According to the extent of malignancy, health status and treatment, patients were divided into 3 groups. Sixty-one, submitted to major and minor curative resections, were in group A and B while group C included 37 patients, unsuitable for high-risk procedures and percutaneous ablation, submitted to intraoperative-radiofrequency ablation (IRFA) alone or combined with minor resections. Assessment of safety and therapeutic efficacy of this managment was evaluated. RESULTS: A postoperative mortality rate of 1,02% and an overall survival rate at 5 years of 62.3% were observed. Indeeed matched post-operative morbidity and mortality rates of A, B, C groups were 45%, 8%, 16.21% (p < 0.004) and 9 %, 0%, 0% (p= 0.112 ) respectively. 3 years overall-survival was not statistically different (p= 0.585). However 5 years survival rate and disease-free-survival rate were significantly higher in patients of group A and B (p= 0.003; p< 0.001). CONCLUSION: Treatment strategies to minimize treatment-related morbidity and mortality have resulted satisfactory for early and late outcomes of an heterogeneous group of elderly patients with HCC.
Keywords
- Elderly and very elderly patients
- First line treatments
- Hepatocellular carcinoma