Liver Venous Deprivation for Rapid Liver Hypertrophy Before Major Hepatectomy: A Case Report

Author:

John Nathan1,Montorfano Lisandro1,Nagarajan Arun2,Simpfendorfer Conrad H1,Wexner Steven D3,Amin Parag4,Roy Mayank1

Affiliation:

1. Department of General Surgery, Section of Hepatobiliary and Pancreatic Surgery, Digestive Disease Institute, Cleveland Clinic Florida, Weston, FL, USA

2. Department of Hematology and Medical Oncology, Cleveland Clinic Florida, Weston, FL, USA

3. Department of Colorectal Surgery, Digestive Disease Institute, Cleveland Clinic Florida, Weston, FL, USA

4. Department of Imaging, Section of Interventional Radiology, Cleveland Clinic Florida, Weston, FL, USA

Abstract

Liver venous deprivation (LVD) is an emerging, minimally invasive strategy to induce rapid liver hypertrophy of the future liver remnant (FLR) before a major hepatectomy. LVD (aka “double vein embolization”) entails same-session percutaneous embolization of the portal and hepatic veins of the planned liver resection. This report discusses LVD’s utilization and technical challenges in managing a 49-year-old male with recurrent multifocal colorectal liver metastases (CRLM). The patient initially underwent neoadjuvant FOLFOX chemotherapy followed by a simultaneous laparoscopic sigmoid colectomy and liver surgery (microwave ablation of segment V and wedge resections of segment one and IVb), followed by completion of chemotherapy. The patient had an R0 resection with clear colon and liver surgical margins. Nine months after the initial surgery, the patient had a rise in tumor markers, and surveillance imaging demonstrated recurrence of liver metastases in segments I and V. LVD was performed by interventional radiology, which led to a 28% increase in FLR (segments II, III, and IV); initially measuring 464 cm3 before LVD and measuring 594 cm3 on post-procedure day 21. The patient underwent right hemi-hepatectomy and caudate resection on post-procedure day 29. The patient did not have any complications and was discharged on postoperative day 6. The patient remains disease-free with no evidence of recurrence at 12 months follow-up.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Medicine

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