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Micrometastatic colorectal cancer lesions in the liver

Authors :
Masamichi Hara
Masao Nanko
Hiroshi Shimada
Hidenori Masui
K. Matsuo
Hideyuki Ike
Kuniya Tanaka
Hiroyuki Yamaoka
Shigeo Oki
Source :
Surgery Today. 28:707-713
Publication Year :
1998
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 1998.

Abstract

A surgical resection of metastatic liver lesions from colorectal cancer contributes to an improved prognosis. However, the postoperative recurrence rate remains high, particularly in the residual liver. This is probably the result of the failure to detect small lesions. In the present study, we histologically examined the presence of intrahepatic micrometastases, which are considered to be related to recurrence in the residual liver. Intrahepatic micrometastases were histologically examined in 31 resected specimens of 25 patients undergoing a hepatic resection because of metastasis to the liver from colorectal cancer. Micrometastases were found in 14 of 25 cases (56.0%). They were located in the portal veins, central veins, sinusoid, and bile ducts. The longest distance from the main metastasis was 38.2 (mean 7.5 +/- 8.0) mm. The size of the macrometastases became larger, and the frequency of micrometastases and the distance of micrometastases from macrometastases had a tendency to increase. Continuous invasion of the macrometastases into the micrometastases through the vasculature or bile duct was also observed. These results suggested that some micrometastases observed in the metastatic liver from colorectal cancer were thus seeded from the primary lesions, while other micrometastases originated from the macrometastatic lesions as satellite lesions.

Details

ISSN :
14362813 and 09411291
Volume :
28
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Surgery Today
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d9c28ba8aaa289fc9ac12be5d3d6d49d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/bf02484616