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Treatment of Abdominal Malignant Neoplasms Using Regional Chemotherapy With Hemofiltration

21

Citations

14

References

1991

Year

Abstract

The regional delivery of high-dose chemotherapy for malignant neoplasms of the limb with the isolated regional perfusion technique was first described in the late 1950s. Recently, the use of concomitant hemofiltration for rapid systemic drug removal permits the use of higher regional drug levels in treating patients with advanced abdominal malignant neoplasms without complete vascular isolation. Twenty-five patients successfully underwent 42 treatments of high-dose intra-arterial chemotherapy with concomitant hemofiltration at Tulane University Medical Center Hospital, New Orleans, La, from 1989 through 1990. One patient (4%) achieved a complete response. Two patients (8%) had partial responses following high-dose intra-arterial chemotherapy with concomitant hemofiltration and their residual disease was resected for cure. Seven patients (28%) achieved a partial response, 11 (44%) had stable disease, and four (16%) had progression of disease.

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