Medicina (Dec 2021)

Is Long-Term Survival in Metastases from Neuroendocrine Neoplasms Improved by Liver Resection?

  • Alin Kraft,
  • Adina Croitoru,
  • Cosmin Moldovan,
  • Ioana Lupescu,
  • Dana Tomescu,
  • Raluca Purnichescu-Purtan,
  • Vlad Herlea,
  • Irinel Popescu,
  • Florin Botea

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/medicina58010022
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 58, no. 1
p. 22

Abstract

Read online

Background and Objectives: Although many of the neuroendocrine neoplasms (NEN) have a typically prolonged natural history compared with other gastrointestinal tract cancers, at least 40% of patients develop liver metastases. This study aims to identify whether liver resection improves the overall survival of patients with liver metastases from NEN. Materials and Methods: We conducted a retrospective study at “Fundeni” Clinical Institute over a time period of 15 years; we thereby identified a series of 93 patients treated for NEN with liver metastases, which we further divided into 2 groups as follows: A (45 patients) had been subjected to liver resection complemented by systemic therapies, and B (48 patients) underwent systemic therapy alone. To reduce the patient selection bias we performed at first a propensity score matching. This was followed by a bootstrapping selection with Jackknife error correction, with the purpose of getting a statistically illustrative sample. Results: The overall survival of the matched virtual cohort under study was 41 months (95% CI 37–45). Group A virtual matched patients showed a higher survival rate (52 mo., 95% CI: 45–59) than B (31 mo., 95% CI: 27–35), (p Conclusions: Hepatic resection is nowadays the main treatment providing potential cure and prolonged survival, for patients with NEN when integrated in a multimodal strategy based on systemic therapy.

Keywords