Hepatic artery infusion chemotherapy (HAIC) pump for liver mets

Posted by susan159 @susan159, Dec 13, 2022

Does anybody have any experience with the HAI pump for Colon Cancer that has spread to the liver? My Dr. is telling me that this is my best bet; because After 7 months of chemo I still have way too much cancer in my liver for surgery. So the pump is my only hope of ever shrinking the 10 fairly large tumors in my liver enough to ever have surgery. No one implants the pump locally so I'm going to have to travel and have my surgery across the country. I've been told I will need to be away for at least 2 months getting the surgery, recovering, and getting my pump dosage set up and working. I'm pretty stressed about it all. So if anybody has any positive experience with this pump I would love to hear it. I guess I should hear anything negative too. I have been searching the internet and what I see is pretty positive. But I'm a little suspicious that if this works so well, why is the procedure not more widely available?

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Hello @susan159,

I can really understand you wanting to connect with others who have had this procedure. While we wait for others to respond to your question, I found some information about this chemotherapy pump on The Duke Health website. Here is the link,

https://www.dukehealth.org/blog/chemotherapy-pump-helps-people-metastatic-liver-cancer-live-longer In this article it mentions the promising results.

You mention that you will need to travel in order to have this procedure. Will you have a traveling companion to go with you? What are your main concerns right now?

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Hi @susan159, I believe that @tinad was considering options for liver metastatsis, including hepatic artery infusion chemotherapy (HAIC) pump. She may have experiences to share.

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@colleenyoung

Hi @susan159, I believe that @tinad was considering options for liver metastatsis, including hepatic artery infusion chemotherapy (HAIC) pump. She may have experiences to share.

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Sorry but I did not have the mentioned procedure, I had a liver section and traditional chemo.

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@hopeful33250

Hello @susan159,

I can really understand you wanting to connect with others who have had this procedure. While we wait for others to respond to your question, I found some information about this chemotherapy pump on The Duke Health website. Here is the link,

https://www.dukehealth.org/blog/chemotherapy-pump-helps-people-metastatic-liver-cancer-live-longer In this article it mentions the promising results.

You mention that you will need to travel in order to have this procedure. Will you have a traveling companion to go with you? What are your main concerns right now?

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Yes, my husband will travel with me. Although one of my fears is that he will not be able to be with me for appts and surgery because of Covid/RSV/Flu restrictions. It's going to be a pretty big surgery: Colon, part of my liver, gall bladder, and pump insertion all in one surgery is what I've been told. The thought of being in a big strange hospital recovering without any support of family and friends is upsetting to say the least. I hate the thought of recovering so far from home in a hotel/extended stay suite or whatever. These will all be new, strange doctors to me. But I'm sure that my biggest fear is that I'm going to go through all of this and still not have a positive outcome. It's pretty scary. I don't know all the details, but the think the plan is that the HAI pump will eventually shrink my tumors enough to resect them one part of my liver at a time. I really don't know how many surgeries we would be talking about. I have 10 tumors in my liver in all different parts. Until I make the trip and meet the doctors I won't really know what they are thinking.

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@susan159

Yes, my husband will travel with me. Although one of my fears is that he will not be able to be with me for appts and surgery because of Covid/RSV/Flu restrictions. It's going to be a pretty big surgery: Colon, part of my liver, gall bladder, and pump insertion all in one surgery is what I've been told. The thought of being in a big strange hospital recovering without any support of family and friends is upsetting to say the least. I hate the thought of recovering so far from home in a hotel/extended stay suite or whatever. These will all be new, strange doctors to me. But I'm sure that my biggest fear is that I'm going to go through all of this and still not have a positive outcome. It's pretty scary. I don't know all the details, but the think the plan is that the HAI pump will eventually shrink my tumors enough to resect them one part of my liver at a time. I really don't know how many surgeries we would be talking about. I have 10 tumors in my liver in all different parts. Until I make the trip and meet the doctors I won't really know what they are thinking.

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@susan159

I can certainly understand how difficult this must be for you and your husband. Is your first appointment set? Will it be after the first of the year?

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No the appt. is not set. I need to get another set of scans to make sure I only have cancer in my liver and colon before I would be accepted to have this procedure. Right now my scan is set for 1/23. I'm not sure if they might move that up. I'm kind of planning to try and get through Christmas and then work on pinning down what's going to happen. In the mean time, I'm hoping the family at Christmas will distract me but....It's not easy...Thanks for asking

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I have an HAIC pump and it helped me to get to NED status! It did take a bit of getting used to, but I recommend it if you have liver mets like I did. I went to University of Colorado in Denver for my treatment. I'm actually trying to find other hospitals that can help with it, as I would like to relocate away from Colorado but I'm having some difficulty with that.

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Here's more information about HAI pump at Mayo Clinic
– Hepatic artery infusion pump chemotherapy spares livers and saves lives https://www.mayoclinic.org/medical-professionals/cancer/news/hepatic-artery-infusion-pump-chemotherapy-spares-livers-and-saves-lives/mac-20539443

@ladycatelyn and @susan159, can you share more about your experiences with the HAI pump? What were the side effects like. Catelyn, were you able to get treatment elsewhere?

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@ladycatelyn

I have an HAIC pump and it helped me to get to NED status! It did take a bit of getting used to, but I recommend it if you have liver mets like I did. I went to University of Colorado in Denver for my treatment. I'm actually trying to find other hospitals that can help with it, as I would like to relocate away from Colorado but I'm having some difficulty with that.

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Hi,

I will be getting mine at Duke in Durham this august. Then they can do the bi-weekly top offs at their oncology centers anywhere in the Duke oncology network (for me it will be Cary).

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@colleenyoung

Here's more information about HAI pump at Mayo Clinic
– Hepatic artery infusion pump chemotherapy spares livers and saves lives https://www.mayoclinic.org/medical-professionals/cancer/news/hepatic-artery-infusion-pump-chemotherapy-spares-livers-and-saves-lives/mac-20539443

@ladycatelyn and @susan159, can you share more about your experiences with the HAI pump? What were the side effects like. Catelyn, were you able to get treatment elsewhere?

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Since you asked, here’s my HAI pump story to date: I apologize for the length. I was diagnosed a little over a year ago with Stage IV Colon Cancer which had metastasized to my liver. I had one tumor in my ascending colon and many large tumors in my liver. My Oncologist started me with Folfox and added Avastin(immunotherapy) after a few months. Initially my tumors were shrinking. But after less than 6 month I had to discontinue Oxaliplatin due to neuropathy problems and I had to discontinue Avastin because I was having such a severe reaction to it during my infusions (Rigor mostly). The Dr. then switched me to Irinotecan and the FU pump. Under this regime my tumors stopped shrinking. My CEA levels started to rise and the tumors started growing.

Around this time (November/ Dec.) my group of Drs in San Antonio, who are affiliated with MD Anderson, hired a new Surgical Oncologist who is being tasked with bringing the HAI pump option to their practice in San Antonio. This Dr. suggested that I not wait until his HAI pump program was up and running, but get the pump implanted ASAP. MD Anderson in Houston does not offer the HAI pump. The closest place I could get treated was in Dallas (5 hours from me). Another other option was to go to Sloan Kettering in NYC. I opted for MSK for a number of reasons:
1) My Dr. in San Antonio had done a fellowship at MSK and is familiar and in contact with many of the Drs I would be seeing in NY. Going forward it seemed like this would make coordinating my care easier when I eventually can come back home to San Antonio for my HAI pump infusions.
2) MSK in NYC is where the HAI pump was developed and they have been implanting it successfully for 20 years.
3) Through family I connected 1st hand with Brian who had a very similar medical scenario to mine. (Too many liver mets to be resected etc…) He had the HAI pump implanted at MSK 10 or 15 years ago. He credits it with saving his life and he was very helpful and forthcoming about his Drs. And his experience. Some of the Drs he told me about have become my Drs. Brian has been cancer free for 10 or 15 years now.
4) My husband and I have many ties to family and friends in NY. We generally spend our summers upstate, so NY seemed like a logical plan.

Everything took longer than anticipated, but I had my surgery at MSK in mid-March. I had my ascending colon resected, my gall bladder removed, and the HAI pump implanted in one big surgery. (You must have your gall bladder removed before getting HAI chemo because the stronger chemo going through your liver would cause it to be removed later anyway). I opted not to have the surgery done robotically for various reasons. The recovery was very difficult for me. The gall bladder surgery gave me chronic diarrhea which kept me from getting my strength back. I am controlling it with Cholestyramine and starting to finally get some of my stamina back. But it’s been a long haul.

My other complication has been that when they went in to do my surgery they discovered that my liver blood vessels were “fragile”. I had a dissection in my Hepatic artery and so the HAI pump was not working properly. (Nothing wrong with the pump, my blood vessels/pathways are the problem). When they did a “pump scan” it turned out the stuff was going into other organs besides my liver (Spleen, duodenum, maybe stomach?). So, I was not able to get any pump chemo. This is apparently a very unusual occurrence.

I have been taking a baby aspirin/day and trying to get stronger. I have had 4 pump tests and things are improving with each one. The interventional radiologists have gone in twice through both my groin and my wrist trying to help my blood vessels send HAI chemo on the correct path, but so far there isn’t much they can do. My liver blood vessels have atrophied and were too small for them to do any intervention a month ago. That being said, my last pump test in May showed that the HAI pump was no longer sending stuff to any organs outside of the liver. Unfortunately, the pump is only able to get drugs to parts of my liver right now. But my Drs determined that since nothing was going outside the liver, I could start getting HAI chemo along with my systemic chemo 2 weeks ago.

I get systemic chemo every two weeks and the HAI chemo is really every 4 weeks. They alternate every two weeks with saline solution in the pump. It’s too soon for me to tell you weather it’s working yet. I have only had one HAI infusion so far.

Here are some details:
1)They told me the pump was the size of a hockey puck. For me, it’s more like somebody cut a softball in half and glued it to my stomach. (I’m told mine sticks out more than other’s because I’m thin).
2)You have to keep the pump filled, so even when I wasn’t getting chemo in it, I needed to get saline put into it every 2 weeks. (Eventually, when you don’t need chemo any more, they can put glycerin in it which only needs a refill every couple of months or something.
3)Getting the pump filled is pretty much the same as accessing your port. No big deal. They 1st go in and empty and measure anything left in the pump and then refill it.
4)After only one HAI treatment I didn’t notice any side effects from it. They need to monitor your liver blood work very carefully to make sure the HAI chemo is not doing any harm to your liver.
5) Apparently Irinotecan usually works very well with the HAI pump. I am sorry but I’m not exactly positive about what chemo is going through the HAI pump. I think it’s FU, but don’t quote me on that. As I understand it, whatever they use, it’s the only way it’s done. There is only one drug option for the HAI pump, but again I could be wrong.

If somebody out there wants more details or to talk to me about the HAI pump experience, I’d be happy to have a phone call. I just don’t know how to arrange that without publishing my phone number to the world.

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