HPB Surgery
Volume 11 (2000), Issue 6, Pages 413-419
doi:10.1155/2000/25954
Case Report
Giant Hepatic Hemangioma With Kasabach–Merritt
Syndrome: Is the Appropriate Treatment
Enucleation or Liver Transplantation?
1Department of Surgery, University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville, Florida, USA
2Hepatobiliary Service, Department of Surgery, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, 1275 York Avenue, New York 10021, New York, USA
Received 22 October 1999
Abstract
We present a case of giant cavernous hemangioma of
the liver with disseminated intravascular coagulopathy
(Kasabach–Merritt syndrome) which was
cured by enucleation. The 51 year old woman
presented with increased abdominal girth and easy
bruisability. Workup elsewhere revealed a massive
hepatic hemangioma and she was started on radiation
therapy to the lesion and offered an orthotopic
liver transplant. After careful preoperative preparation,
we felt that resection was possible and she
underwent a successful enucleation. The operation
and postoperative course were complicated by
bleeding but she recovered and remains well in
followup after 6 months. All coagulation parameters
have returned to normal. Enucleation should
be considered the treatment of choice for hepatic
hemangiomas, including those presenting with
Kasabach–Merritt syndrome. The benefits of enucleation
as compared to liver transplantation for
these lesions are discussed.