TY - JOUR
T1 - Hepatocellular carcinoma complicated with coexisting hepatolithiasis
T2 - Pitfalls in diagnosis and management
AU - Yeh, Ta Sen
AU - Chen, Tse Ching
AU - Hsieh, Ling Ling
AU - Jan, Yi Yin
AU - Jeng, Long Bin
AU - Hwang, Tsang Long
AU - Chen, Miin Fu
PY - 1998
Y1 - 1998
N2 - Nineteen patients with hepatocellular carcinoma associated with hepatolithiasis were retrospectively analyzed. Eleven of the 19 patients presented with hepatolithiasis-related biliary infection. Diagnosis was erroneously assumed to be hepatolithiasis alone, liver abscess, or cholangiocarcinoma in five of 11 patients before surgery was attempted. Middle-age, male sex, liver cirrhosis, hepatitis B or C infection, abnormal a-fetoprotein, and negative carcinoembryonic antigen raised the suspicion of associated hepatocellular carcinoma rather than cholangiocarcinoma in patients with hepatolithiasis. Antibiotics and nonoperative methods to resolve biliary infection first, followed by hepatectomy, in selected cases, to eradicate hepatocellular carcinoma and hepatolithiasis simultaneously provides the best chance for long-term survival. Otherwise, patients often died of hepatolithiasis-related biliary sepsis rather than hepatocellular carcinoma per se in the long run.
AB - Nineteen patients with hepatocellular carcinoma associated with hepatolithiasis were retrospectively analyzed. Eleven of the 19 patients presented with hepatolithiasis-related biliary infection. Diagnosis was erroneously assumed to be hepatolithiasis alone, liver abscess, or cholangiocarcinoma in five of 11 patients before surgery was attempted. Middle-age, male sex, liver cirrhosis, hepatitis B or C infection, abnormal a-fetoprotein, and negative carcinoembryonic antigen raised the suspicion of associated hepatocellular carcinoma rather than cholangiocarcinoma in patients with hepatolithiasis. Antibiotics and nonoperative methods to resolve biliary infection first, followed by hepatectomy, in selected cases, to eradicate hepatocellular carcinoma and hepatolithiasis simultaneously provides the best chance for long-term survival. Otherwise, patients often died of hepatolithiasis-related biliary sepsis rather than hepatocellular carcinoma per se in the long run.
KW - Carcinoembryonic antigen
KW - Cholangiocarcinoma
KW - Hepatocellular carcinoma
KW - Hepatolithiasis
KW - α- fetoprotein
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/0031792797
U2 - 10.1023/A:1026694501805
DO - 10.1023/A:1026694501805
M3 - 文章
C2 - 9824139
AN - SCOPUS:0031792797
SN - 0163-2116
VL - 43
SP - 2483
EP - 2488
JO - Digestive Diseases and Sciences
JF - Digestive Diseases and Sciences
IS - 11
ER -