Hepatic hilar block as an adjunct to transarterial embolization of neuroendocrine tumors: A retrospective review of safety and efficacy Journal Article


Authors: Jain, S.; Blume, H.; Rodriguez, L.; Petre, E.; Moussa, A.; Zhao, K.; Sotirchos, V.; Raj, N.; Reidy, D.; Ziv, E.; Alexander, E.
Article Title: Hepatic hilar block as an adjunct to transarterial embolization of neuroendocrine tumors: A retrospective review of safety and efficacy
Abstract: Purpose: This study investigates whether hepatic hilar nerve blocks (HHNB) provide safe, effective analgesia in patients with neuroendocrine tumors (NET) treated with transarterial embolization (TAE). Methods: The retrospective study included all NETs treated with TAE or TAE + HHNB from 1/2020 to 8/2022. Eighty-five patients (45 men), mean age 62 years, were treated in 165 sessions (TAE, n = 153; TAE + HHNB, n = 12). For HHNBs, ≤10 mL bupivacaine HCl 0.25% ± 2 mg methylprednisolone were injected under ultrasound guidance. The aims were to assess safety of HHNB and reduction in pain. Groups were compared with Pearson’s chi-squared and Wilcoxon rank sum tests. Logistic regression assessed independent risk factors for pain. Results: No immediate complications from HHNBs were reported. No difference in incidence of major complications between TAE and TAE + HHNB one month post-embolization was observed (7.19% vs. 8.33%, p = 0.895). No differences in mean length of hospital stay after treatment were observed (TAE 2.2 days [95%CI: 1.74–2.56] vs. TAE + HHNB 2.8 days [95%CI: 1.43–4.26]; p = 0.174). Post-procedure pain was reported in 88.2% of TAE and 75.0% of TAE + HHNB patients (p = 0.185). HHNB recipients were more likely to use analgesic patches (25.0% vs. 5.88%; p = 0.014). No other differences in analgesic use were observed. Conclusions: HHNBs can safely be performed in patients with NETs. No difference in hospital stays or analgesic drug use was observed. Managing pain after TAE is an important goal; further study is warranted. © 2023 by the authors.
Keywords: adult; drug safety; nuclear magnetic resonance imaging; quality of life; computer assisted tomography; tumor volume; clinical assessment; oncology; retrospective study; risk factor; ultrasound; dyspnea; neuroendocrine tumor; length of stay; hospitalization; heart failure; hypoglycemia; methylprednisolone; octreotide; corticosteroid; ketorolac; liver biopsy; analgesic agent; neuroendocrine tumors; platelet count; nerve block; fluoroscopy; clindamycin; cefazolin; polyvinyl alcohol; interventional oncology; retrospective review; human; male; female; article; artificial embolization; post-embolization syndrome
Journal Title: Cancers
Volume: 15
Issue: 21
ISSN: 2072-6694
Publisher: MDPI  
Date Published: 2023-11-01
Start Page: 5202
Language: English
DOI: 10.3390/cancers15215202
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC10647661
PUBMED: 37958376
DOI/URL:
Notes: The MSK Cancer Center Support Grant (P30 CA008748) is acknowledged in the PDF -- Corresponding author is MSK author: Erica Alexander -- Source: Scopus
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MSK Authors
  1. Diane Lauren Reidy
    294 Reidy
  2. Elena Nadia Petre
    108 Petre
  3. Nitya Prabhakar Raj
    106 Raj
  4. Etay   Ziv
    111 Ziv
  5. Amgad Mohamed Abdelhady Moussa
    34 Moussa
  6. Ken Zhao
    35 Zhao
  7. Samagra Jain
    1 Jain
  8. Harrison Blume
    2 Blume