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Current status and progress in gastric cancer with liver metastasis—— a review LIU Jing, CHEN Lin Department of General Surgery, Chinese People’s Liberation Army General Hospital, Beijing 100853, China (LIU Jing, CHEN Lin) School of Medicine, Nankai University, Tianjin 300071, China (LIU Jing, CHEN Lin) Correspondence to: Prof. CHEN Lin, Department of General Surgery, Chinese People’s Liberation Army General Hospital, 28 Fuxing Road, Beijing 100853, China (Tel: 86-10-66938128. Email: [email protected]) Keywords: gastric cancer; liver metastasis; diagnostic imaging; therapeutics Objective: This review discusses the current status and progress of gastric cancer with liver metastasis (GCLM), involving: (1) the routes, subtypies and prognosis of GCLM (2) the related genes and molecules in its metastatic mechanism (3) the feasibility and value of each imaging modalities (4) the up-to-date treatment options. Data sources: The data used in this review were mainly from Medline and PubMed published in English from 2005 to August 2010. The search term was “gastric cancer” and “liver metastasis”. Study selection: Articles regarding the the characteristics, the diagnostic modalities and various therapeutic options of GCLM were selected. Results: The prognosis of GCLM is influenced by the clinicopathological characteristics of primary tumours as well as liver metastases. Improved understanding of related genes and molecules will lead to the development of early detection and targeted therapies. For the diagnosis of GCLM, each imaging modality has its relative benefits. However, for the therapeutic options, there is still no consensus statement. Conclusion: Early detection and characterization of liver metastases is crucial for the prognosis of gastric cancer patients. Multidisciplinary team discussions are required to design the optimal treatment strategy, which is tailored according to the clinicopathological characteristics of each patient. Gastric cancer is the fourth most common cancer and the second leading cause of cancer deaths worldwide .1 In China, incidence rate and mortality rate for gastric cancer in 2006 were 35.02 and 26.08 per 100,000 person respectively, which are second only to lung cancer.2 The prognosis is generally rather poor, with a 5-year survival rate below 30%.1 Early detection and adequate treatment is an important way to reduce death rate from gastric cancer, the high mortality is predominantly due to late presentation. The development of liver metastases is a fatal event for gastric cancer patients and remains a major cause of cancer-related death, with a 5-year survival rate as low as 0~10% in unselected cases. Liver metastases from gastric cancer refers to the liver lesions originating from primary gastric cancer, which was proved by imaging studies, histological studies or laparotomy. In 2%~9.9% patients, liver metastases is defined by detection before or during surgery of primary gastric cancer(synchronous metastases); while 13.5%~30% represent the evolution of the disease after a potentially curative surgical treatment (metachronous metastases). 3-8 However, there is still no widespread agreement regarding the definition of synchronous or metachronous liver metastases. Hwang et al. defined synchronous metastasis as metastasis occurring within 1 year after gastrectomy, while Thelen et al. has chosen 6 months as the cut-off point in their research.9, 10 Metachronous liver metastasis is usually detected within a 2-year period of time following initial gastrectomy. 3 According to the distribution of liver metastases, the degree can be classified as follows, H1: metastases were limited to one of the lobes, H2: there were a few scattered metastases in both lobes, and H3: there were numerous scattered metastases in both lobes.11 ROUTES FOR LIVER METASTASIS OF GASTRIC CANCER Gastric cancer spreading to liver are mainly through hematogenous route, lymphatic dissemination, and serosal invasion of the primary tumor. Hematogenous metastasis is the most generally accepted theory for the development of liver metastasis, which has been supported by clinicopathological analyses of resected specimens, showing a relationship between venous invasion and liver metastasis.12 Gastric cancer cells in the blood vessel are disseminated to various organs through the portal vein, therefore, liver becomes the first filter of cancerous cells. Based on the phenomenon of lymphatico-venous communication and lymph flow reflux by lymphatic obstruction, lymphatic involvement is closely linked with the establishment of liver metastasis.13 In particular, extranodal invasion was a significant risk factor.14 Intrahepatic metastasis from the initial liver metastases were also present in 58.8% of patients of liver metastases from gastric cancer. They were located in the vicinity of the liver metastasis, within 5.0 mm of the tumor border. These micrometastases may be one of the major explanations for the high recurrence rate in the remnant liver after hepatic metastasectomy or thermal ablation.15 SUBTYPES OF GASTRIC CANCER LIKELY TO METASTASIZE TO THE LIVER Gastric cancer with liver metastases(GCLM) is known to consist of the following histological types:differentiated adenocarcinoma, poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma, endocrine carcinoma and hepatoid adenocarcinoma. These subtypes have unique characteristics, but share common pathological features such as scant fibrous stroma and abundant tumor blood vessels.16 Based on Lauren’s classification, gastric cancer was divided into intestinal-type and diffuse –type. Intestinal-type is more likely to develop liver metastases, due to higher expression of EMPPRIN, which could stimulate MMP and VEGF expression of surrounding stromal cells.17 Besides the two traditional manners of the classification of gastric cancer, several investigators have defined gastric cancer into 4 categories: gastric, gastric and intestinal mixed, intestinal, and null phenotype according to the immunopositivity of human gastric mucin stainings; MUC5AC and MUC6 are recognized as gastric phenotypic markers, while MUC2 and CD10 are as intestinal phenotypic markers.18-20 Wakatsuki et al demonstrated that intestinal phenotype gastric cancer had the highest rate of postoperative liver metastasis.20 PROGNOSIS OF GCLM To our knowledge, 6 studies related to the prognosis and the clinicopathological prognostic factors of GCLM with a patient number beyond 40 have been published within the recent 5 years. The prognosis of liver metastases remains poor with an median survival time (MST) ranging from 5 to 34 months after the diagnosis of liver metastasis, and even worse if concomitant extrahepatic metastases are present.4, 7-9, 21-23 MST was slightly, but not significantly longer in metachronous liver metastases patients than in synchronous liver metastases patients.4, 9, 21 (MST: 5 m versus 4 m, P = 0.439; 34 m versus 22 m, P=0.774) The clinicopathological factors of primary gastric cancer may influence survival in GCLM. Survival rate in relation to depth of invasion reveals that serosal invasion is a marginally non- favorable prognostic factor.4 In a study for 72 sychronous GCLM patients, tumor depth of invasion≤T2 was picked up for the predictor of survival by a univariate analysis.8 A multicentric survey reported that the 1 year survival rate for T1,T2,T3 and T4 was 50%,52%,27% and 0, respectively (P=0.019). Survival rates were decreased in relation to advanced N stage. Tiberio et al. also reported that the presence of lymph node metastases independent from the extension of the metastatic spread N1-3 was associated with worse prognosis.7 For H1, 2 patients without peritoneal dissemination, lymph node metastases (N2, 3versus N0,1) was an independent non-favorable prognostic factors of survival.8 According to the distribution of liver metastases, the MST for H1, H2, and H3 GCLM patients were 16.6, 10.2, and 4.4 months, respectively (P<0.02). 8 The number of liver metastases is another significant prognostic factor. 4, 21 The 1-,3-, 5- years survival rates in solitary liver metastasis patients(79.2%,33.3% and 23.8%,respectively) were significantly higher than multiple liver metastases patients (51.3%,7.8% and 2.6%,respectively).21 GCLM RELATED GENES AND MOLECULES Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) family is a major inducer of angiogenesis and lymphangiogenesis that can promote the growth and metastasis of tumor. VEGF-A play an important role in occurrences of distant metastases of GC patients by acting though VEGFR-1 and VEGFR-2.24 Kaplan et al. found that VEGFR-1 originated from hematopoietic progenitor cells in bone marrow and functions as a cancer niche to facilitate metastasis.25 The formation of liver metastases of gastric cancer was most likely when isolated tumor cells circulated in the presence of high levels of VEGFR-1.26 VEGF-D involved in lymphatic spreading of gastric cancer cells, which is an important contributor to liver metastasis from gastric cancer via lymphatic metastasis after radical gastrectomy.24, 27 In the primary tumor of GCLM patients, the number of VEGFR -3 positive vessels was significantly much higher than that in primary tumor of gastric cancer patients without any recurrence 24. The proto-oncogene c-met encodes a 190 kDa heterodimeric transmembrane tyrosine kinase which has been identified as the receptor of hepatocyte growth factor (HGF).28 HGF binds to met, induces receptor homodimerization, phosphorylation of the cytoplasmic tyrosine kinase domain and activation of met-mediated signaling, which allows the activation of different downstream pathways, including phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase-Akt signaling and Ras-mitogen-activated protein kinase pathways, ultimately leads to pleiotropic responses such as proliferation, motility, morphogenesis, and angiogenesis in the process of tumor invasion and metastasis. 29, 30 A higher degree of c-Met protein expression is strongly associated with tumor invasion and liver metastasis, which can be a promising indicator of liver metastasis in gastric cancer patients.31, 32 These observations have led to the development of agents that can effectively inhibit HGF/met signaling through direct inhibition of the receptor (anti-Met antibodies), through inactivation of its ligand HGF (AMG102, L2G7), by interfering with HGF binding to MET (NK4), or by inhibiting Met kinase activity (PHA-665752 and SU11274).32 MAGE-A family genes are expressed in malignant tumours, whereas they are not expressed in adult tissue except the testis and placenta.33 MAGE-A protein and the expression of MAGEA10 gene in patients with gastric cancer was significantly higher in patients with liver metastasis than in patients without; moreover, MAGE-A10 can be a predictive marker for metachronous liver metastasis even in low-stage gastric cancers.34 MAGE-A10 mRNA expression is much specific to the prediction of liver metastases from gastric cancer, as it was found in only 2 and 0% of the cases of primary lesion and liver metastasis in colon cancer, respectively.35 E-cadherin, a metastasis-suppressor gene, is the strongest molecule for homophilic adhesion of epithelial cells and plays an important role in the formation of epithelial architecture; loss or reduction of E-cadherin expression may induce the dissociation of cells from primary tumours, due to loosened intercellular adhesion. 36 Compared with the normal tissues, the expression level of E-cadherin in gastric cancer decreased in primary tumors and further decreased in metastases.37 The process of epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition has been reported to be an important event characterized by loss of E-cadherin during malignant tumour progression and metastasis.35 Tyrosine phosphorylation of β-catenin, overexpression of c-erbB-2 and activation of ERas in the primary tumors all contribute to the loss of E-cadherin function, resulting in reduced cell-cell adhesion and in cellular transformation, playing a crucial role in promoting gastric cancer cell survival and metastases to liver.38, 39 Besides those mentioned above, up-regulation of a group of molecules and genes such as osteopontin, phosphatase of regenerationliver-3, BUBR1, HSP90AA1, CCNE1, urokinase-type plasminogen activator and matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-2, 9, down-regulation and/or promoter methylation of some tumor suppressors such as Nm23-H1, KISS1 and KAI1, GRIM-19, NR4A2, NR3C1 in tumor tissues or sera have been demonstrated to be associated with the development of liver metastases from and poor outcome of gastric cancer. 40-46 DIAGNOSIS OF GCLM Imaging modalities The presence of hepatic metastases greatly affects prognosis and treatment protocol design of patients with gastric cancer. Accurate detection and characterization of hepatic metastases, including differentiating malignant lesions from benign process and evaluating the extent of the metastatic burden, is critical for a patient’s diagnostic workup. In 2002, a meta-analysis has compared the accuracy and examined the ability to detect hepatic metastases of several imaging methods. When the required specificity was set at greater than 85%, the most sensitive method was 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (PET) with a sensitive of 90%, followed by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI;76%), computed tomography (CT;72%), and ultrasonography (US;55%).47 Ultrasonography Conventional transabdominal ultrasonography is routinely used as the first-line imaging modality in detection of liver metastases, and it also plays a substantial role for intraprocedural localization during biopsy and therapeutic interventions such as thermal ablation, providing real-time imagine with no ionizing radiation to the operator.48 Liver metastases from gastrointestinal primary tumors frequently present as hyperechoic lesions. Internal echogenicity with posterior acoustic shadowing is a feature of calcified metastases, which can be seen with mucinous adenocarcinomas of the gastrointestinal tract.49 The reported sensitivity values of US is quite lower than CT or MRI, ranging from 40% to 77% which will drop to 20% for small lesions (especially<1cm) or for isoechoic lesions compared with the surrounding liver parenchyma.50, 51 Thus, incidental hepatic lesion detection on abdominal US frequently initiates a request for an additional cross-sectional imaging study with greater accuracy such as CT or MRI. The development of new ultrasound contrast agents and sonographic techniques has considerably improved the possibilities of US in the detection of hepatic metastases, as well as in the guidance and evaluation of response of therapeutic procedures. Contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) have clearly improved the sensitivity in detecting liver metastases to 80%~90%, which has no statistical difference in the diagnostic performance with CT, and is especially helpful for liver metastasis smaller than 10mm.50 CEUS alone was sufficient to classify 89.0% of the focal liver lesions as benign or malignant. It served as a one-stop diagnostic test for 80.8% of the patients, reducing the need for CT or MR scans and providing savings in terms of radiation exposure, time, and money.52 Computed tomography In clinical practice, CT is the mainstay of oncological imaging for its excellent availability, good patient tolerance, and reproducibility of examinations. As metastatic hepatic lesions are usually hypovascular, the optimal CT strategy is helical scanning during the portal venous phase of enhancement. This technique improves lesion conspicuity by increasing the attenuation of normal liver tissue; occasionally, rim enhancement of a hypoattenuating metastasis can be seen.53 The advent of multi-detector row computed tomography (MDCT) effectively replaced computed tomography during arterial portography for diagnosis of hepatic metastases. MDCT has high accuracy for evaluating staging, especially for the detecting of enlargement of lymph nodes (LN), distant metastases, and for predicting the resectability of gastric cancers preoperatively. The accuracy of MDCT for overall M staging was high (85.6%), for identifying liver metastases, the sensitivity was 80.0%.54 CT scan is a standard test for the detection of the liver metastases, however, the reported sensitivity for small metastases <1.5 cm are low.55 A comparison between total liver-volume perfusion CT (CTP) and four- phase CT has been done recently, revealed that CTP increased sensitivity to 89.2 from 78.4% (P=0.046) and specificity to 82.6 from 78.3% (P=0.074), which indicated that CTP is a noninvasive, quantitative, and feasible technique.56 Magnetic resonance imaging MRI is considered to be the optimal diagnostic modality for evaluation of suspected hepatic metastases, with reported sensitivity of 80% to 100% and specificity up to 97%.57 The diagnostic performance of MRI for small lesions (<1.0 cm in size) has been shown to be superior to helical CT.58 Modern comprehensive liver-imaging protocols generally use a variety of sequences to optimize lesion detection and characterization. DW-MRI was found to be sensitive for detection of small liver lesions(less than 1 cm) that mimicked small intrahepatic vessels, however, as there is an overlap of apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) values between different types of lesions, the predominant limitation of the DW-EPI sequence is the differentiation between benign and malignant lesions.59 Metastatic liver tumors often coexist with benign focal hepatic lesions, such as hemangiomas or cysts. Thus, discrimination between them is important for the treatment and prognosis of patient with gastric cancer. Contrast-enhanced MR imaging can demonstrate tissue-specific physiological information, thereby facilitating liver lesion characterization, which may facilitate the accurate diagnostic workup of patients in order to avoid invasive procedures for lesion characterization such as biopsy. Gadolinium- enhanced-T2-weighted images, SPIO-enhanced T2-weighted MR images have been reported to have the ability to make the differentiation of primary malignant, metastatic, and benign lesions in the liver.60 However, with the increasing awareness of the potential risks of contrast material administration in patients with severe renal failure, there is a strong clinical need for methods to diagnose liver metastases without exogenous contrast material. Nasu et al. retrospectively compared the accuracy of respiratory triggered diffusion-weighted echo-planar imaging (DW-EPI) in combination with unenhanced T1- and T2-weighted imaging versus SPIO-enhanced imaging and revealed that there was no significant differences for the sensitivity and specificity between the two image sets.61 DW-MRI, combined with unenhanced T1- and T2-weighted imaging can be a reasonable alternative to contrastenhanced MRI for the detection of liver metastases.61 Moreover, DW-MRI is a promising, noninvasive technique for helping predict and detect therapeutic responses to chemotherapy in patients of GCLM. An early increase in the mean ADC and a low pre-therapy mean ADC can help predict good response to chemotherapy in these patients.62 Positron emission tomography For overall patient management, Positron emission tomography (PET) using Fluorine-18 fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG), i.e.,18F-FDG PET and FDG-PET with CT, i.e., PET/CT have the added advantage over MRI and CT of providing not only anatomic but also functional information. The major advantages of PET predominantly referred to the ability of detection of extrahepatic disease and the early evaluation of therapeutic response rather than its sensitivity in the detection of hepatic metastases. One series found a sensitivity and specificity of 85% and 74% for FDG-PET in the detection of liver metastases originating from gastric cancer.63 Recent studies demonstrated that the detection rate of liver lesions was significantly lower for PET/CT than for Gd-EOBDTPA–enhanced MRI (64% and 85%; P =0.002), which is especially relevant in small liver metastases 1 cm or less in diameter.64 The detection of extra-hepatic metastases is an essential factor influence the therapeutic options. FDG-PET has the advantage in the diagnostic performance for extra-hepatic metastatic disease, with PET reportedly identifying 10% to 20% more sites of extrahepatic disease than by CT alone. 58 Furthermore, FDG PET has been successfully used to monitor the effect of chemotherapy. CT-observed tumour response depends on tumour size reduction, which is a relative late sign of response. An earlier sign of response is the chemotherapy-induced reduction in tumour metabolic rate, which could be detected by FDG-PET.65 PET also has the potential to evaluate the efficacy of a radiofrequency thermal ablation (RFA) procedure by indicating macroscopic tumor-free margin as total photopenia and macroscopic residual tumor as focal uptake. Such an assessment would allow a second RFA treatment to be performed early—at a time when efficacy is likely to be higher than if waiting for a lesion to appear on CT or MRI months later.66 Tumor marker Serum assay of tumor markers may be useful for an early diagnosis of liver metastases during follow-up, but the positivity of tumor markers in recurrent gastric cancer is not site-specific. Daniele et al has made an prospective study and demonstrated that the combination of the 3 markers (CEA, CA19-9, and CA 72-4) was proved to be highly sensitive for predicting liver metastases, as an increase in serum levels was observed in 96.4%patients; in the remaining patient, preoperative levels for all 3 markers were negative and the histologic type was diffuse. 3 An RT-PCR analysis of CEA mRNA in the peripheral blood seems to be a promising tool for the early detection of micrometastatic circulating tumor cells in gastric carcinoma patients.67 Recent research on the prognostic value of preoperative CEA, CA 19-9, CA 72-4, and AFP levels in gastric cancer reported that CEA was significantly more frequently positive in the patients with liver metastases, as well as CA 19-9 in patients with lymph node, peritoneal, and serosal involvement, CA 72-4 in patients with lymph node, peritoneal and liver involvement.68 Moreover, CEA level was significantly higher for bilobar metastases than unilobar involvement.69 Alpha-fetoprotein (AFP)-positive gastric cancer is strongly associated with hematogenous factors such as venous invasion, hepatic metastasis and aggressive biological factors.70 Gastric cancer metastasised to the liver was found to overexpress HER2 at a significantly higher incidence than primary gastric cancers. All these gastric cancer liver metastasis cell lines are highly sensitive to gefitinib, whereas most of the HER2 low expressing lines are not.71 SALL4 expression was observed in the neofetal stomach in gestational week 9 and disappeared thereafter. It was also identified in 15% of gastric carcinomas, associated with intestinal-type histology (P=0.0001) and synchronous liver metastasis (P=0.0047). AFP and GPC3 were closely associated with SALL4 expression in gastric carcinoma (both, P<0.0001). SALL4 was positive in all AFP-producing gastric cancer , which is a sensitive marker for AFP-producing gastric cancer.72 TREATMENT STRATEGIES Standard treatment has not been well established for GCLM. If no specific treatment was given , the survival of patients with metastatic gastric cancer would be extremely poor with an MST of 3-5 months.73 Palliative chemotherapy is primarily used in these patients and the reported MST is approximately seven months.74 Hepatic resection has been widely accepted as a proper modality for treating colorectal metastases. However, the benefits of gastrectomy and hepatic metastasectomy for either the synchronous or metachronous GCLM are still a matter of debate. Many other therapeutic options for treating GCLM have also been reported, such as hepatic arterial infusion chemotherapy (HAIC), transcatheter arterial chemoembolization(TACE) and thermal ablation, however, the efficacy and safety of these treatments have not been fully evaluated. Therefore, there is still no widely accepted indication or contraindication for each therapeutic options. Palliative gastrectomy for synchronous GCLM The rationale for offering palliative gastrectomy to GCLM patients is as follows: (1)The potential life-threatening symptoms such as obstruction, perforation or bleeding can be relieved by removing a bulky symptomatic tumor .(2) The removal of the tumor load makes the residual tumor more responsive to adjuvant treatment.(3) Volume and tumor burden reduction diminishes the metabolic demands made on the patient by the tumor.(4) As tumor itself can produce immunosuppressive cytokine, reducing the tumor burden may also have some immunologic benefits. 75-77 Several studies have shown that gastrectomy can prolong the survival in gastric cancer with concomitant liver metastases, while others hold the opposite attitude.22, 69, 78, 79 Some reports have shown the survival benefits of gastrectomy for incurable advanced gastric cancer. An MST of 8.0-16.3 months with gastrectomy was reported, compared to 2.4-6.8 months without. 22, 75, 80 In addition, the survival benefit of gastrectomy was obtained only in patients with a single non-curative factor.81 As a result, for synchronous liver metastases patients with multiple metastatic sites (such as peritoneal dissemination, lung metastases or ovary metastases, etc), palliative gastrectomy may be of no survival benefits. For liver-only synchronous metastases patients, gastrectomy might prolong the survival, especially if combined with adjuvant therapy as part of multimodality treatment. 69, 82 Kwok et al. revealed that gastrectomy might prolong the survival in patients with unilobar metastasis, but not in those with bilobar diseases.69 Kim et al. reveal that palliative resections are not associated with an increased postoperative mortality rate.83 Hartgrink et al. did not recommend palliative resection for patients more than 70 years of age, because when morbidity, hospital stay, and mortality are considered, no benefit existed for patients over the age of 70 undergoing palliative resection.84 In patients with gross metastatic disease, potential benefits and risks must be balanced before palliative resection is undertaken. Palliative gastrectomy for synchronous GCLM might be associated with survival advantage in selected group of patients. A multicenter, prospective, randomized trial is being conducted in Japan and Korea to investigate the superiority of gastrectomy followed by chemotherapy to chemotherapy alone in clinically stage IV advanced gastric cancer with a single non-curable factor, in terms of survival benefit and safety associated with gastrectomy or chemotherapy.85 Hepatic Metastasectomy The vast majority of liver metastases from gastric cancer are multiple, bilobar, and frequently combined with peritoneal or extensive lymph node metastases and tumors in adjacent organs. Therefore, many patients with liver metastasis are not suitable candidates for hepatic resection, even if only a solitary hepatic metastasis is involved. Selected patients accounting for 0.2%~37.9% of all cases with liver metastasis can undergo hepatic resection, with the survival rates ranging from 15%–77% survival at 1 year, 0%–42% survival at 5 years and an MST of 8.8-34 months. 6, 86 Previous studies showed that recurrence after hepatic resection for liver metastasis from gastric cancer was 63.6-91% and that rates of recurrence in the remaining liver were 47-76%.Therefore, the clinical benefit of resection for liver metastasis from gastric cancer has not been widely accepted and remains controversial. The long-term results after hepatic resection are disappointing, recurrence and death rate are high within 2 years of surgery, however, long-term survivors after hepatectomy do exist. 87Therefore, the determination of selection criteria for hepatic resection is crucial and patients with appropriate risk factor status should be proposed whenever possible. The indications for hepatic resection for metastases have not been established. The criteria for hepatic resection raised by Okano et al. are broadly defined: Hepatic resection is indicated in patients (1) with synchronous metastases who have no peritoneal dissemination or other distant metastases and (2) with metachronous metastases, but no other recurrent lesion. Ambiru et al. added a third criterion, i.e. complete resection of hepatic metastases with acceptable postoperative hepatic function.88 A recent research from Japan revealed that in patients with H1and2 synchronous metastases without peritoneal dissemination who received surgical treatment for primary and hepatic metastatic tumors, the cumulative 1- and 5-year survival rates were 80.0% and 60.0%, which is dramatically enlongated in comparison to previous reports. The high survival rates indicated an accurate patient selection of H1and2 without peritoneal dissemination for hepatic surgical treatment and confirmed that synchronous metastasis is not a contraindication for hepatectomy.8 The significant prognostic factors are mainly related to the following 4 aspects: the condition of primary gastric cancer, number or distribution of liver metastases, timing of the hepatectomy, and the surgical margin. Regarding the primary gastric cancer, Tsujimoto et al. noted D2 lymphadenectomy of the primary gastric cancer were the most important predictors of survival after hepatic resection.89 It has been reported that serosal invasion4, 87, venous invasion5, 90, lymphatic invasion87, 90,tumor diameter5, 89, lymph node metastasis90 and histological type 91 of the primary gastric tumor are significant prognostic factors in patients undergoing hepatic resection for liver metastasis. As for the aspect of liver metastases , it is reported that number 4, 6, 86, 90, 91 , distribution5, 21, 86 timing91 and tumor size 5 are significant prognostic factors. The presence of fibrous pseudomenbrane is another factor of prognostic value.91 Whether surgical margin of hepatic metastases is a prognostic factor remains controversial. Koga et. al, considered resection margins as an independent prognostic factor for survival 4, however, Cheon et. al. reported that positive surgical margin did not greatly affect patient survival negatively. 6 Anyway, positive surgical margins should be avoided if possible . The high incidence of intrahepatic recurrence may result from the occult intrahepatic metastases even at the time of surgery.15A second hepatic resection is rarely indicated, postoperative monitoring for the remaining liver and adjuvant chemotherapy is a sensible strategy for improving survival. As we mentioned above, complete surgical resection of the primary gastric tumor and liver metastases is a promising treatment for this disease. The GYMSSA trial is being conducted to compare gastrectomy, metastasectomy plus systemic therapy versus systemic therapy alone. This trial will either help validate or reject the notion based on retrospective data that aggressive surgical resections in combination with systemic chemotherapy might improve outcomes in metastatic gastric cancer. The inclusion criteria for liver metastases is unilateral or bilateral, ≤ 5 lesions and ≤ 15 cm total diameter. 92 The feasibility of hepatic metastasectomy is expected to be clarified in its subgroup analysis. Ablative therapy As most of the patients with GCLM are not candidates for resection, local ablative therapies have emerged as a possible alternative or complement to resection. Ablative techniques include radiofrequency thermal ablation (RFA), microwave ablation( MWA) and cryoablation. Thermal ablative technologies are increasingly being used either alone or in combination with resection to treat patients of liver metastases. Cryoablation of the liver has largely fallen out of the favor because of reported higher postoperative complications and worse local recurrence rates.93 RFA and MWA are effective and low risk treatment modalities in patients with liver metastases, which both allow flexible treatment approaches, including percutaneous, laparoscopic, or open surgical access, with convenient ultrasonographic or computed tomographic guidance.94, 95 The procedure is safe with low mobility and can be performed repeatedly on an outpatient basis with good palliative effect. Several reports have show their experience of thermal ablative technologies in the treatment of hepatocellular cancer or colorectal hepatic metastasis, however, only a few small series have been reported on the experience of GCLM. In 2010, Kim et al reported their retrospective experience of RFA versus systemic chemotherapy of gastric cancer patients with liver-only metastases. Of the 29 patients in the study, 20 underwent gastric resection plus RFA and 9 underwent gastric resection plus systemic chemotherapy. The RFA group showed an overall one-, three- and five-year survival rates of 66.8%, 40.1% and 16.1% respectively, and an MST of 30.7 months. Compared to systemic chemotherapy group, RFA group has a 76% decreased death rate, suggested that a use of RFA as a liver-directed treatment may provide greater survival benefit than chemotherapy and is an alternative option for the treatment of liver-only metastases from gastric cancer.96 A second RFA can also be performed for recurrent liver metastasis from gastric cancer.97 The size and number of the liver metastasis are the most important factors in determining whether complete local ablation can be achieved.98 Lesions measuring less than 5cm in diameter have been reported to have 95.3% chance of being destroyed, however, for tumors measuring greater than 5cm, the rate for completely ablated decreased to less than 50%.99 For tumors measuring smaller than 5cm, the number of tumors present is a significant prognostic factor for survival rate; for those measuring larger than 5cm , it is the size rather than the number of the liver metastasis is the most important factor.100 MWA offers many of the benefits of RFA and still has a number of advantages over the current RFA systems, such as higher intratumoral temperatures, larger ablation volumes, faster ablation times, no heat sink effect, less dependency on the electrical conductivities of tissue and energy delivery less limited by the exponential rising electrical impedances of tumor tissue.101, 102 Liang et al reported on their 10-year experience of MWA on 128 patients with 282 liver metastases nodules, including 26 patients with the primary disease of non-colorectal gastrointestinal cancer. The 5-year cumulative survival rates of all 128 patients were 31.89% .Tumor size of liver metastases, primary tumor differentiation have been shown to correlate with survival.103 Generally, the therapeutic results for most GCLM patients were disappointing due to intrahepatic recurrences. The data on RFA or MWA on GCLM remains somewhat limited. As thermal therapy continues to be adopted, additional prospective data will be required to better define its safety and efficacy. Transarterial therapy Transarterial administration of anticancer drugs can be performed either alone as hepatic arterial infusion (HAI), or combined with vascular occlusive agents [transarterial chemoembolization (TACE) or bland vascular embolization (TAE).] Transarterial therapy of liver matastases takes advantages of the first-pass effects of cytotoxic agents, delivering higher local drug concentration to unresectable liver tumors with fewer significant systemic side effects.104 It can be used for liver-only metastases patients as an effective method of local control or be performed as a neoadjuvant therapeutic regimen, aiming at lesion size reduction so that the lesion can later be effectively ablated percutaneously or resected. Moreover, it can also be used in combination with intravenous chemotherapy as a palliative measure in cases of extrahepatic spread or post-surgical recurrence . There have been few reports of transarterial intervention therapy for GCLM, with the responding rates ranging from 62.5% to 83%, MST ranging from 16.5 to 36.1 months. 105-107 The development of extrahepatic lesions during HAI therapy could be an important factor determining prognosis.106 Ojima et al reported that local benefits to the liver could be obtained by performing HAI for a long period of time for synchronous GCLM patients. The amount of 5-FU of 500 mg was an appropriate quantity, with a response rate as high as 83%. However, HAI was not associated with any improvement in the survival rate, which was conditional on the possibility of gastrectomy.106Yamakado et al. reported a prospective study that evaluated the efficacy of HAI followed by RFA for treatment of GCLM. After HAI in all patients, RFA was performed for all residual liver tumors, resulting in complete tumor necrosis, with an MST of 16.5 months.107 Transarterial administration of anticancer drugs combined with vascular occlusive agents can achieve higher tissue drug concentrations which may elicit an increased antitumor response. The vascular occlusive agents can be either temporary [usually microspheres, degradable starch microspheres (DSM), collagen and gelatine sponge (Gelfoam)] or permanent [polvinyl alcohol (Ivalon)]. Hirasawa et al. reported the effects of transcatheter arterial chemoembolization(TACE) using DSM in GCLM patients after prior systemic chemotherapy. Infusion of epirubicin hydrochloride (40–70 mg/body) following arterial chemoembolization with DSM and mitomycin C (4–12 mg/body) was administered. The response rate was 62.5% and the MST was 36.1 months. 105 Patients with a tumor burden of more than 75% of the liver from gastric cancer may have limited benefits from TACE, due to the development of complications such as liver abscess, infarction and tumor rupture. TACE is an effected treatment for hypervascular metastases from gastric cancer, however, for hypovascular metastases, TACE is not recommended. 108 Systemic chemotherapy For the vast majority of patients with gastric cancer, liver involvement may reflect generalized disease. Local control may not be sufficient, especially for those with extra-hepatic metastases. Systemic chemotherapy apart from surgical resection and local control is an appropriate option with the hope of prolonged survival. However, the best chemotherapy regimen for metastatic gastric cancer is uncertain. Recently, new chemotherapy regimens, including S-1, irinotecan, and taxanes, have been investigated intensively. The Japan Clinical Oncology Group (JCOG) 9912 trial demonstrated that S-1 is non-inferior to fluorouracil (hazard ratio, 0.83 [95% confidence interval (CI), 0.68–1.01]), Irinotecan plus cisplatin is not superior to fluorouracil (hazard ratio,0.85; 95% CI, 0.70–1.04). In subgroup analyses, the effect of irinotecan plus cisplatin on progression-free survival and overall survival was greater in patients with target lesions, such as lymph node metastases or liver metastases, than in those without target lesions.109 The multicenter phase III study (SPIRITS trial) verified that S-1 plus cisplatin holds promise of becoming a standard first-line treatment for patients with advanced gastric cancer. The MST was significantly longer in patients assigned to S-1 plus cisplatin than in those assigned to S-1 alone. However, in subgroup analyses, the effect of S-1 plus cisplatin on overall survival was greater in patients without target tumors than in those with target tumors. 110 The multinational phase III study (FLAGS trial) demonstrated CDDP +S-1 was at least noninferior to 5-FU +CDDP (hazard ratio, 0.92; 95% CI, 0.80–1.05) and resulted in a significantly better safety profile than 5-FU +CDDP. Therefore, S-1 +CDDP is considered to be one of the standard regimens for advanced gastric cancer based on these results.111 A phase II study of docetaxel and S-1 combination therapy revealed that the response to docetaxel-S-1 was not affected by the type of organs involved or the histologic tumor type. The highest overall response rates among the metastatic sites were observed for patients in the subgroup of with liver metastases (64.7%).112 The phase III study of docetaxel and S-1 versus S-1 (JACCRO GC-03) is ongoing.113 A pilot study was undertaken to assess the effect of weekly docetaxel, cisplatin and fluorouracil (DCF) as a preoperative treatment for gastric cancer with multiple synchronous liver metastases. The response rate was 100% according to the RECIST criteria. As the high response to weekly DCF, it should be verified through phase II and III trials as an important part of the comprehensive treatment for GCLM.114 A phase II study of S-1, docetaxel and cisplatin combination chemotherapy in patients with unresectable metastatic gastric cancer revealed that DCS combination chemotherapy is highly active against unresectable metastatic gastric cancer and can be given safely with proper management of adverse events.25.8% patients achieved downstaging, including liver metastases patients, who got the chance of gastrectomy and RFA for liver metastases after 3 DCS courses. 115 The combination of CPT-11 plus S-1 is reported to achieve a high response rate (58%) for GCLM when a certain regiment is employed. Kochi et al. reported that treatment with CPT-11 plus S-1 achieved higher response rate and significantly better survival than CDDP plus S-1 without severe toxicity in GCLM patients 116 Newer generation of cytotoxic agents have shown promising activity for patients with metastatic gastric cancer. Further studies for their role as adjuvant and neoadjuvant therapy are warranted. CONCLUSIONS AND FUTURE PROSPECTS Early detection and characterization of liver metastases is crucial for the prognosis of gastric cancer patients. Improved understanding of related genes and molecules such as VEGF family, HGF/met signal pathway, E-cadherin, etc. will assist in the development of promising tumor marker for the early detection of patients with high risk of liver metastasis. Moreover, it will also led to the development of targeted therapies and perhaps can serve as a predictive marker for chemosensitivity. Each imaging modality has its relative benefits in the evaluation of GCLM: Helical multidetector CT is widely available for larger lesions, whereas MRI has superior performance versus helical CT in detection and characterization of small liver metastases. US is frequently used as a guiding technology for percutaneous lesion sampling and therapeutic interventions. PET-CT is superior in the detection of extrahepatic disease versus other modalities. CEUS is a non-invasive and promising tool in detecting liver metastases as well as in the guidance and evaluation of response of therapeutic procedures. Palliative gastrectomy and hepatic metastasectomy for GCLM patients is reasonable,however, the indication for this protocol must be strictly selected. The optimal treatment strategies should be tailored according to the clinicopathological characteristics of each patient. 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