TY - JOUR
T1 - Combining on-table embolization with immediate resection to safely excise giant hepatic hemangiomas
AU - Maker, Ajay V
AU - Al Rameni, Dina
AU - Prabhakar, Naveen
AU - Advocate Diagnostic Radiology Faculty - Illinois Masonic, null
N1 - Maker AV, Al Rameni D, Prabhakar N. Combining On-Table Embolization with Immediate Resection to Safely Excise Giant Hepatic Hemangiomas. J Gastrointest Surg. 2021;25(6):1651-1653. doi:10.1007/s11605-021-04957-8
PY - 2021/6/1
Y1 - 2021/6/1
N2 - The management of symptomatic giant hepatic hemangiomas (> 10 cm) varies in the literature. Multiple interventional approaches have been described including surveillance, embolization, enucleation, and resection based on tumor size, location, relationship to vascular and biliary structures, and the quality and quantity of the functional liver remnant. Resection is often performed as a last resort due to the risk of major hemorrhage. Preoperative arterial embolization is an option; however, many patients will experience severe pain, fever, transaminitis, acidosis, recanalization, and collateral inflow that limit its utility. Furthermore, patients require post-procedure inpatient observation, and there is no consensus on the appropriate time interval between procedures. We present and demonstrate a technique in the video that utilizes a hybrid operating room with on-table angiogram capabilities to perform hemangioma inflow embolization and immediate hepatic resection under the same anesthesia in a single procedure. Combining on-table embolization with immediate resection avoids many of the pitfalls of preoperative embolization, while enhancing the safety of the resection by decreasing the size of the tumor, enabling compressibility, and facilitating exposure of the vascular inflow and outflow. It is an efficient use of hospital resources and eliminates an intervening hospital admission. We have found it to be a preferred approach to enhance the safety and feasibility of resection for massive hepatic hemangiomas with minimal intraoperative blood loss and reduced risk.
AB - The management of symptomatic giant hepatic hemangiomas (> 10 cm) varies in the literature. Multiple interventional approaches have been described including surveillance, embolization, enucleation, and resection based on tumor size, location, relationship to vascular and biliary structures, and the quality and quantity of the functional liver remnant. Resection is often performed as a last resort due to the risk of major hemorrhage. Preoperative arterial embolization is an option; however, many patients will experience severe pain, fever, transaminitis, acidosis, recanalization, and collateral inflow that limit its utility. Furthermore, patients require post-procedure inpatient observation, and there is no consensus on the appropriate time interval between procedures. We present and demonstrate a technique in the video that utilizes a hybrid operating room with on-table angiogram capabilities to perform hemangioma inflow embolization and immediate hepatic resection under the same anesthesia in a single procedure. Combining on-table embolization with immediate resection avoids many of the pitfalls of preoperative embolization, while enhancing the safety of the resection by decreasing the size of the tumor, enabling compressibility, and facilitating exposure of the vascular inflow and outflow. It is an efficient use of hospital resources and eliminates an intervening hospital admission. We have found it to be a preferred approach to enhance the safety and feasibility of resection for massive hepatic hemangiomas with minimal intraoperative blood loss and reduced risk.
KW - Bleeding
KW - Embolization
KW - Enucleation
KW - Giant
KW - Hemangioma
KW - Hepatectomy
KW - Hybrid
KW - Immediate
KW - Liver
KW - On-table
KW - Resection
UR - https://institutionalrepository.aah.org/immcradiologyfaculty/3
UR - https://xk8bg6rv9a.search.serialssolutions.com/?sid=Entrez:PubMed&id=pmid:33634420
U2 - 10.1007/s11605-021-04957-8
DO - 10.1007/s11605-021-04957-8
M3 - Article
JO - Journal of gastrointestinal surgery : official journal of the Society for Surgery of the Alimentary Tract
JF - Journal of gastrointestinal surgery : official journal of the Society for Surgery of the Alimentary Tract
ER -