Background/aims: We estimated the significance of the vascularity of small hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) as a predictor of long-term prognosis in patients treated with percutaneous ethanol injection therapy (PEIT/PEI).
Methods: Fifty-four patients who have been followed-up in our hospital and who had HCC less than 20 mm in diameter were observed for 199 to 2074 days. Hepatic angiography (digital subtraction angiography; DSA and ultrasound angiography with intraarterial CO2 microbubbles; USAG) was performed before treatment in all cases, and the vascularity of the tumor was clinically evaluated. The survival rate was analyzed according to this vascularity.
Results: Of the 54 tumors, 24 had tumor stain on DSA, while 30 did not, and 38 showed enhancement on USAG, while 16 did not. The 3- and 5-year survival rates were 48.7 and 34.1% and 89.7 and 69.7% of patients with negative staining HCC (p = 0.0723). The rates were 48.6 and 36.7%, respectively, of patients with positive enhancement HCC on USAG, and both rates were 85.7% of patients with negative enhancement HCC (p = 0.0231).
Conclusions: Tumor vascularity will play a role in the long-term prognosis of these patients with small HCC when they are treated with PEIT/PEI.