Treatments
Cryosurgery
Cryosurgery is a major surgical operation, using general anesthesia and requiring a
large incision in the abdomen. (Occasionally, these procedures are done with a laparoscope, but usually they are done with open surgery.) The purpose of the cryosurgery is to destroy all present tumors (including a margin of healthy tissue) by freezing them. Cryoprobes are placed directly into the liver and supercooled liquid nitrogen / argon gas flows through the probes to freeze the intended area. This results in cellular crystallization, cell shrinkage and membrane damage. Thawing results in further damage as the area becomes hypotonic and smaller crystals re-crystallize to larger ones. Usually, two freeze-thaw cycles are done in each area because it has been shown to produce a better destruction of cancer cells than a single cycle.
Risks/Side Effects/Complications
Mortality rates
for patients undergoing cryosurgery range from 0% to 4% in most published
studies. Major complications have been reported in the range of 0-23% of patients.
The most common complications are:
- Transient elevation of liver enzymes (short-term increase)
- Coagulopathy (problems with blood clotting)
- Leukocytosis (high white blood cell count)
- Mild fever
- Pleural effusion (fluid around the lungs)
- Hypothermia (cold body temperature)
Other complications include, but are not limited to:
- Bleeding during the procedure / liver surface cracking
- Injury to nearby structures
- Gas embolism (air in a blood vessel)
- Cardiac arrhythmia
- Delayed bleeding
- Thrombocytopenia (reduced platelets in the blood)
- Prolonged prothrombin time (bleeding time)
- Disseminated intravascular coagulation
- Myoglobinuria
- Acute renal failure
- Ascites (fluid in the abdomen)
- Bile leakage
- Infection/abscess
- Liver failure
- Cryoshock syndrome -- thrombocytopenia, disseminated intravascular
coagulation, renal failure, hepatic failure, and adult respiratory distress
syndrome - potentially fatal multisystem failure
- Recovery time and life style
changes
Because cryosurgery is done as an open abdominal surgical procedure with
general anesthesia, the average hospital stay is five to seven days, if
there are no complications. The abdominal incision wound needs to be cleaned
three times each day for about the first two weeks following surgery. Patients
generally should not drive for at least two weeks after this surgery. In
addition, patients are usually advised to limit their physical activity
and not to do any heavy lifting for up to three months after surgery. If
the cyrosurgery is done laparoscopically, using a scope inserted through
a small incision, recovery time and lifestyle changes are decreased.
Effectiveness
With cryosurgery, survival rates
for patients with HCC have been reported to be 56 to 60% at one year, 24
to 36% at two years, and 10-23% at three years. For patients with colorectal
metastases to the liver, survival rates range from 62-77% at one year and
from 50-65% at two years. One study reported only a 5% survival rate at three
years. Local recurrence has been reported to be 10% for metastatic patients
undergoing cryosurgery.