When physicians prescribe systemic chemotherapy, they need to strike a careful balance: the dose needs be strong enough to kill cancer cells throughout the body but not so strong that it harms healthy tissue and causes severe side effects.
Hepatic artery infusion (HAI) therapy offers a new approach for people whose colorectal cancer has spread to the liver. It allows physicians to deliver chemotherapy directly to the liver at doses up to 400 times higher than standard systemic chemotherapy with fewer side effects. Fred Hutch Cancer Center is the only place in Washington state and one of only two in the Pacific Northwest to offer HAI therapy.
“This treatment is highly effective for a patient whose colorectal cancer has spread to the liver but nowhere else," said Rachael A. Safyan, MD, a gastrointestinal medical oncologist and medical director of the Fred Hutch/UW Medicine HAI Pump Program.
"It’s been shown to improve the chances of resection of colorectal liver metastases and improve survival," said Safyan, an assistant professor in the Clinical Research Division at Fred Hutch and in the Division of Hematology and Oncology at the University of Washington School of Medicine. "We’re thrilled to be able to offer it to our patients.”
How HAI therapy works
For HAI therapy, a surgeon implants a small pump, about the size of a deck of cards, under the skin of the abdomen and inserts a catheter between the pump and the hepatic artery, a primary blood vessel transporting oxygenated blood to the liver.
“For some patients, surgery with a traditional open incision is the best approach," said Jonathan G. Sham, MD, MBEE, a surgical oncologist and surgical director of the Fred Hutch/UW Medicine HAI Pump Program.
"But most of the time, we can perform robot-assisted minimally invasive surgery in which the largest incision is only 12 millimeters," said Sham, who is chief of hepatopancreatobiliary surgery and an associate professor in the Department of Surgery at the UW School of Medicine. "This allows patients to recover and get back to their lives more quickly and start receiving medicine through the pump sooner."
Liver tumors receive most of their blood supply from the hepatic artery, while healthy liver tissue relies more on the portal vein. Delivering chemotherapy through the hepatic artery targets tumors directly, while sparing much of the healthy liver and the rest of the body.
“The chemotherapy drug we use in HAI therapy, called floxuridine, has a short half-life, and it has near complete extraction within the liver," said Safyan. "This is why we can deliver high concentrations to tumors in the liver while minimizing the systemic toxicity of treatment."