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[Successful Anesthetic Management of a Patient with Critical Bleeding during Hepatectomy Using Recombinant Activated Factor VII and Intraoperative Blood Salvage].

A 58-year-old 79 kg male with metastatic liver cancer was scheduled for hepatectomy. Preoperative examination did not reveal any hemostatic abnormalities. Nine hours into the surgery, a vascular clip attached to the middle hepatic vein was disconnected and rapid bleeding followed. Unscheduled intraoperative cell salvage was employed. Despite surgical hemostasis as well as transfusion with fresh frozen plasma and platelets, significant oozing persisted for 10 hours, and cumulative blood loss amounted to 30,000 ml. Therefore, we administered fibrinogen products and recombinant activated factor VLL (rFVIIa, NovoSeven), a potent hemostatic initiator used in treating congenital factor VII deficient patients. After injecting 5 mg of rFVIIa, the bleeding was controlled almost immediately, and the surgery was completed within an hour. Although postoperative computed tomography detected subclinical but extensive thrombosis in the middle hepatic vein, the inferior vena cava, and the deep femoral veins, the thrombus spontaneously dissolved within seven months postoperatively. There was no evidence of metastatic disease 24 months postoperatively. Off-label use of rFVIIa and intraoperatively salvaged autologous blood transfusions are life-saving procedures for cancer patients who have massive bleeding during surgery, although we cannot completely exclude the possibility of serious postoperative thrombotic events and/or hematogenous cancer dissemination.

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