BackgroundHepatic resection of liver metastases of non-colorectal, non-neuroendocrine, and non-sarcoma (NCNNNS) primary malignancies seems to improve survival in selected patients. The aims of the current review were to describe long-term results of surgery and to evaluate prognostic factors for survival in patients who underwent resection of NCNNNS liver metastases.MethodsWe identified 30 full texts (25 single-center and 5 multicenter studies) published after year 1995 and published in English with a total of 3849 patients. For NCNNNS liver metastases, 83.4 % of these subjects were resected.ResultsNo prior systematic reviews or meta-analyses on this topic were identified. All studies were case series without matching control groups. The most common primary sites were breast (23.8 %), genito-urinary (21.8 %), and gastrointestinal tract (19.8 %). The median 5- and 10-year overall survival were 32.3 % (range 19–42 %) and 24 % (indicated only in two studies, range 23–25 %), respectively, with 71 % of R0 resections.ConclusionsThere is evidence suggesting that surgery of NCNNNS metastases is safe, feasible, and effective if treatment is part of a multidisciplinary approach and if indication is based on the prognostic factors underlined in literature analysis.
Metastatic liver disease from non-colorectal, non-neuroendocrine, non-sarcoma cancers: a systematic review
F. Uggeri,P. Ronchi,Paolo Goffredo,M. Garancini,L. Degrate,L. Nespoli,L. Gianotti,F. Romano
Published 2015 in World Journal of Surgical Oncology
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- Publication year
2015
- Venue
World Journal of Surgical Oncology
- Publication date
2015-05-29
- Fields of study
Medicine
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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