Sections View Full Chapter Figures Tables Videos Annotate Full Chapter Figures Tables Videos Supplementary Content + • 80% of primary hepatic malignancy• 50% with fibrous capsule• 70% with extrahepatic disease• Metastases most common to hilar and celiac nodes• Distant metastases most common to lung and peritoneum• Highly vascular tumors• Often multicentric with nodular satellite lesions +++ Epidemiology + • Equal incidence among genders• 9000 cases/yr in United States• Incidence increases among persons older than 50 years• Fibrolamellar variant (not associated with cirrhosis) peak incidence at age 25• Associated with all etiologies of cirrhosis• Associated with hepatitis B and C prevalence• Greatest incidence in Asia and Africa +++ Symptoms and Signs + • Right upper quadrant pain• Weight loss• Jaundice• Hepatomegaly• Hepatic bruit• Fever• Ascites• Gastroesophageal varices• Distant metastases• Asymptomatic• Intraperitoneal hemorrhage• Decompensated cirrhosis +++ Laboratory Findings + • Hyperbilirubinemia (33% of patients)• Hyperalkaline phosphatase (25% of patients)• Hepatitis B or C positive (75% of patients)• Alpha-fetoprotein > 200 ng/mL +++ Imaging Findings + • CT with IV portography often shows hypervascular tumor, frequently with multicentric disease• US hyperechoic tumor• MRI with or without magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography (MRCP) shows gadolinium-enhancing lesion• Combination of CT, US, and MRI is 80% sensitive• Angiography shows hypervascular tumor + • Biopsy of limited usefulness given high degree of sampling error and risk of tumor seeding• Overall and planned reserve liver function +++ Rule Out + • Metastatic hepatic carcinoma• Cholangiocarcinoma• Benign neoplasms if possible• Other abdominal malignancy + • Serum alpha-fetoprotein• CT• US• Angiography• Biopsy in limited circumstances• Resection for diagnosis and treatment +++ When to Admit + • Liver failure• Hemorrhage• Cholangitis +++ When to Refer + • Always to centers of excellence for planned resection, ablative or transplant therapy +++ Surgery + • Liver transplantation (treatment of choice in the presence of cirrhosis)• Partial hepatectomy with at least 0.5 cm margins (25% are candidates) +++ Contraindications + • Medical comorbidity• Total tumor volume > 6.5 cm (for liver transplantation)• Extrahepatic disease or distant metastases• Bilobar disease and total volume > 6.5 cm• Poor liver function (class C) and not transplant candidate +++ Procedures + • Ethyl alcohol ablation (75% complete necrosis)• Radiofrequency ablation (RFA)• Chemoembolization (50% response in 25% of patients) +++ Treatment Monitoring + • Alpha-fetoprotein• CT• Liver function tests• Physical exams +++ Complications + • Hemorrhage• Biliary leak• Abdominal infection• Liver failure +++ Prognosis + • Negative ... Your Access profile is currently affiliated with '[InstitutionA]' and is in the process of switching affiliations to '[InstitutionB]'. Please click ‘Continue’ to continue the affiliation switch, otherwise click ‘Cancel’ to cancel signing in. Get Free Access Through Your Institution Learn how to see if your library subscribes to McGraw Hill Medical products. Subscribe: Institutional or Individual Sign In Username Error: Please enter User Name Password Error: Please enter Password Forgot Password? Forgot Username? Sign in via OpenAthens Sign in via Shibboleth