Volume 73, No.6: 2021 Siriraj Medical Journal
https://he02.tci-thaijo.org/index.php/sirirajmedj/index
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e mechanisms of ruptured HCC have not yet been
fully elucidated. Some authors believe that it depends
on multifactorial factors
5
, including disruption of the
feeding artery or a tear at the tumor surface. Others
believe that bleeding is likely due to a laceration of
a tumor located supercially resulted from a minor
trauma. Some hypothesize that increased pressure in
the tumor from a sudden occlusion of hepatic vessels
causes venous congestion, in conjunction with central
necrosis within the tumor and coagulopathy, leading to
bleeding or rupture.
In this study, the diagnosis of HCC was based on
the ailand Guideline for Management Hepatocellular
Carcinoma 2019
6
by the ai Association for the Study of
the Liver (THASL). e most common clinical presentation
of ruptured HCC patients is acute abdominal pain with
or without shock. However, a denite diagnosis of the
ruptured HCC needs to be conrmed by dynamic contrast-
enhanced computed tomography (CT).
7,8
e advantages
of CT imaging is its ability to demonstrate the tumor
location, size, number, degree of hemoperitoneum, portal
vein tumor thrombus, and extrahepatic lesions. From
a literature review, we found that almost all previous
ai studies reported the treatment outcome in patients
with unruptured HCC.
9
ere are only two ai studies
concerning the treatment of ruptured HCC patients.
10,11
Also, a study by Kerdsuknirun et al.
12
stated about the
overall survival of ruptured HCC patients compared to
non-ruptured cases, but the report did not mention the
specic treatment.
Consequently, the objective of this study aimed to
report the survival outcome and prognostic factors of
patients with spontaneously ruptured HCC treated by
TAE compared with conservative treatment in ailand.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
e study was approved by the Ethics Committee of
Siriraj Hospital, protocol number 844/2016 (EC3). e
research involved a retrospective study of the ruptured
HCC patients treated at the Faculty of Medicine Siriraj
Hospital, Mahidol University, Bangkok, ailand from
January 2011 to February 2017. Inclusion criteria was
ruptured HCC patients who were 15 years old or older
and treated with TAE or conservative treatment whose
CT imaging and clinical data were available. Exclusion
criteria was patients who were missing data.
A CT scan of the abdomen (120 kVp; 400 mA;
slice thickness, 1.25 mm) was performed for diagnosis
in all patients using a 64-slice CT scanner, General
Electric (GE) Light speed volumetric CT (VCT), and GE
Discovery CT 750HD instruments with an intravenous
non-ionic iodinate contrast media (350 mg I/ml) at a
dose of 2 ml/kg. We dened ruptured HCC according
to dynamic contrast enhanced CT
7,8
demonstrating an
arterial enhancing tumor with delayed phase washout
associated with hemoperitoneum, focal disruption of
the liver capsule, protruding tumor from the hepatic
surface area, and/or active contrast extravasation.
A total of
89 patients who met the inclusion criteria of
ruptured HCC were reviewed. Demographic data included
age, gender, date of diagnosis, and date of death. e
laboratory tests: complete blood count (CBC: hematocrit
and platelet count), coagulogram (prothrombin time or
PT, international normalized ratio or INR), liver function
test (LFT: total bilirubin, direct bilirubin, albumin), and
types of viral hepatitis were collected. We did not obtain
the clinical encephalopathy because it was not recorded
in all patients.
For the CT ndings, we evaluated the size of the
ruptured tumor (measured as the longest diameter in one
dimension), number of tumors, location of the ruptured
tumor (capsular region or protrusion from the hepatic
capsule), ascites, surrounding perihepatic hematoma,
portal vein thrombosis, extrahepatic metastasis, and
contrast extravasation from the CT scan or angiogram.
Aer ruptured HCC was diagnosed, the patient
underwent immediate resuscitation, including intravenous
uid and blood transfusion with or without abdominal
paracentesis. Of the 89 patients, 45 (50.6%) patients
received conservative management and 44 (49.4%) patients
underwent TAE for emergency hemostatic treatment.
TAE group: In hemodynamic instability patients or
patients with continuous bleeding, TAE was chose if the
patient’s liver function was preserved. e procedures
were performed by four experienced interventional
radiologists. e tumor location, neovascularization,
and active bleeding area were determined by angiogram.
Selective arterial embolization was performed in all patients
using a 5Fr angiographic catheter (Radiofocus®, Terumo®,
Tokyo, Japan) followed by super-selective catheterization
using a 2.7Fr microcatheter (Progreat®, Terumo®, Tokyo,
Japan). For embolic materials, our center typically uses
a temporary occlusive particle, Gelfoam® (Spongostan
TM
Absorbable Gelatin Sponge, Denmark), which is cut into
a small cube approximately 1 mm in size. Seven patients
received additional Ethiodized Oil (Lipiodol® UltraFluide,
Guerbet, France), an oil-based radio-opaque contrast
agent which has a specic characteristic for transient
embolization at the hepatic sinusoid level. One patient
received additional polyvinyl alcohol, PVA® (Contour®,
Boston Scientic, Ireland), which is a permanent embolic
particle. Successful control of the bleeding was dened
Chaiyasoot et al.