
Eye Opener to EtOH Ablation for Juxta-Cardiac Hepatocellular Carcinoma
Author(s) -
Erik Soule,
Sanjay Lamsal,
Chandana Lall,
Jerry Matteo
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
gastrointestinal tumors
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2296-3766
pISSN - 2296-3774
DOI - 10.1159/000495135
Subject(s) - medicine , ablation , hepatocellular carcinoma , percutaneous , fluoroscopy , ablation zone , pericardium , nuclear medicine , ventricle , radiology , surgery , cardiology
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is notoriously refractory to systemic chemotherapy, mandating an interventional approach. Mortality may be avoided by neutralizing rapidly growing tumors that approach the heart and major vessels. When the risk/benefit ratio of surgery is unacceptable, percutaneous ablation can achieve remarkable results. High volumes of flowing blood adjacent to the treatment area may impact the ability to reliably achieve an adequate ablation margin for modalities that rely on extreme temperatures to destroy malignant cells. Ethanol ablation is safe, efficacious, and unaffected by this "thermal sink" effect. This report describes a juxta-cardiac (JC) HCC in segment 4a measuring 35 × 26 mm, which exhibited rapid growth until it was abutting the pericardium and 7.5 mm from the chamber of the right ventricle (RV).