RESUMEN
The prognosis of highly advanced unresectable hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) with a portal vein tumor thrombus (PVTT) is poor. There are currently no reports of long-term survival for up to 5 years in patients with advanced HCC who were treated with sorafenib. We describe a patient with Vp4 HCC who was treated with a sorafenib-based multidisciplinary treatment and experienced long-term survival, which may be the longest survival to date. A man in his late 60 s presented with general fatigue. Eight years previously, he received interferon monotherapy for chronic hepatitis C for 48 weeks and achieved a sustained virological response. He was diagnosed with a PVTT (Vp4) with diffuse-type HCC in the S6 lobe of the liver. He received hepatic arterial infusion of chemotherapy using 5-fluorouracil and cisplatin. Because of the occurrence of adverse effects, he was placed on sorafenib treatment. The treatment was effective and the HCC reduced. However, after 3 years of treatment, a 2-cm HCC was observed in the S5 lobe, and the patient underwent laparoscopic partial hepatectomy. After the operation, he continued to receive sorafenib, with no obvious recurrence, and survived for over 108 months after the first treatment. There are currently no reported cases of long-term progression-free survival by sorafenib for five years in patients of Vp4 HCC. In conclusion, we report a case of longest survival of a patient with Vp4 HCC treated with sorafenib-based multidisciplinary treatment.