Objective: To evaluate preliminarily the therapeutic efficacy of transcatheter arterial embolization (TAE) for different histopathologic subtypes of primary hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC).
Methods: A retrospective study of 226 patients with histopathologically diagnosed primary HCC was performed. The patients were treated with either single TAE, surgical resection of tumor alone, or TAE combined with surgical resection. Follow-up information was achieved in 157 of 226 patients. Comparative analyses of survival data and image findings were performed with correlation to histopathologic classification and different therapeutic methods, respectively.
Results: Eight histopathologic subtypes of primary HCC were found in this group, including HCC of trabecular pattern, pseudoglandular pattern, fibrolamellar HCC and sclerosing HCC, as well as HCC of clear cell, of small cell, poorly differentiated or undifferentiated HCC, and hormonally active HCC. The accumulated survival rate for these 157 patients was 74.52% of 1 year, 53.50% of 2 years, 31.85% and 14.01% of 3 and 5 years, respectively. Fibrolamellar HCC and clear cell HCC had relatively higher survival rate (25.00% and 33.22% of 5 years, respectively) than that of other subtypes, and the median survival time of the latter was 71 months. The mean survival time was 25.06 months (SE = 1.87) in single TAE group, 30.38 (SE = 2.05) months in surgical resection, and 72 months (SE = 6.90) in TAE combined with resection.
Conclusions: Discrepancies do exist in therapeutic effect of different subtypes of HCC. In this study, clear cell HCC was more sensitive to TAE than other subtypes, and, in contrast, small cell HCC and poorly differentiated or undifferentiated HCC were of lower sensitivity to TAE.