Hepatic arterial chemotherapy: role of angiography.

Abstract
Hepatic arterial infusion chemotherapy increases the hepatic concentration of chemotherapeutic agents without increasing systemic toxicity. Both percutaneous (most commonly left transbrachial) and surgical approaches are currently used for infusion catheter placement. Surgical catheter and pump placement has proved to be a reliable means of delivering drugs to the liver and has been commonly used for hepatic arterial chemotherapy for metastatic colorectal carcinoma. Meticulous angiographic evaluation of the hepatic vascular anatomy, its variations, and hemodynamics is necessary for correct catheter placement to achieve total liver perfusion without significant extraheptic perfusion. Satisfactory hepatic perfusion should be documented before drug infusion. Hepatic arterial radionuclide flow imaging with technetium-99m-labeled macroaggregated serum albumin remains the msot reliable means of assessing hepatic perfusion following catheter placement. Transcatheter techniques have been used to facilitate catheter placement, to prevent gastrointestinal drug toxicity, and to correct unsatisfactory perfusion following surgical catheter placement.