# Marked effect of topical application of Chinese medicine combined with moxibustion in a case of refractory malignant ascites in diffuse liver cancer

**Authors:** Dou-dou Feng, Xing-ping Zhang, Lei Guo, Chuan He

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2026.1751741 · Frontiers in Medicine · 2026-03-04

## TL;DR

A combination of Chinese herbal paste and moxibustion at a specific acupoint reduced refractory malignant ascites in a patient with advanced liver cancer.

## Contribution

A novel, non-invasive TCM approach combining herbal paste and moxibustion at Shenque acupoint for treating malignant ascites in advanced HCC.

## Key findings

- Abdominal circumference decreased from 86 cm to 71 cm after one month of treatment.
- ECOG performance status improved from 3 to 2 with no adverse effects observed.
- Three additional patients showed ascites stabilization with similar TCM interventions.

## Abstract

Although diffuse hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is rarely encountered in clinical practice, it frequently leads to the refractory complication of malignant ascites. Conventional treatments such as diuretics, therapeutic paracentesis, and intraperitoneal chemotherapy often yield suboptimal outcomes.

We report a detailed case of a 55-year-old female patient with diffuse HCC (CNLC stage IV, Child-Pugh C), portal vein tumor thrombus, and malignant ascites refractory to diuretics. Following confirmation of the diagnosis, she was treated with a novel approach: topical application of a specific herbal paste (containing Asarum sieboldii, Cinnamomum cassia, Zanthoxylum bungeanum, Astragalus membranaceus, and Solanum nigrum) at the Shenque acupoint (CV8) combined with daily one-hour moxibustion. After 1 month of treatment, her abdominal circumference decreased markedly from 86 cm to 71 cm, and her ECOG performance status improved from 3 to 2. The treatment was well-tolerated with no observed adverse effects.

To provide broader clinical context, we briefly note the outcomes of three additional patients with advanced HCC and malignant ascites managed during the same period: two who received the same herbal paste with TDP irradiation (without moxibustion) showed stabilization of ascites, while one untreated patient progressed rapidly.

This detailed case report demonstrates that topical traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) therapy combined with moxibustion at the Shenque acupoint (CV8) was associated with a marked reduction in refractory malignant ascites in one patient with advanced diffuse hepatocellular carcinoma. The treatment was well-tolerated, with no observed adverse effects, and the patient reported subjective symptom relief and voluntarily continued therapy at home, suggesting good acceptability. This unique, non-invasive, acupoint-specific combinatorial strategy introduces a novel approach worthy of further investigation. While these preliminary findings are hypothesis-generating and supported by contextual observations from three additional patients, they require validation through larger, controlled studies to establish efficacy, safety, and underlying mechanisms.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** portal vein tumor thrombus (MESH:D013927), IV (MESH:D006011), HCC (MESH:D006528), Child (MESH:C562515), ascites (MESH:D001201)
- **Chemicals:** Chinese medicine (-)
- **Species:** Astragalus membranaceus (species) [taxon 649199], Zanthoxylum bungeanum (Sichuan-pepper, species) [taxon 328401], Solanum nigrum (black nightshade, species) [taxon 4112], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606], Cinnamomum aromaticum (species) [taxon 119260], Asarum sieboldii (species) [taxon 76098]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

36 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12996151/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12996151