24 research outputs found
Toronto HCC Risk Index::A validated scoring system to predict 10-year risk of HCC in patients with cirrhosis
Background: Current guidelines recommend biannual surveillance for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in all patients with cirrhosis, regardless of etiology. However, HCC incidence is not well established for many causes of cirrhosis. Aim: To assess the disease-specific incidence of HCC in a large cohort of patients with cirrhosis and to develop a scoring system to predict HCC risk. Methods: A derivation cohort of patients with cirrhosis diagnosed by biopsy or non-invasive measures was identified through retrospective chart review. The disease-specific incidence of HCC was calculated according to etiology of cirrhosis. Factors associated with HCC were identified through multivariable Cox regression and used to develop a scoring system to predict HCC risk. The scoring system evaluated in an external cohort for validation. Results: Of 2,079 patients with cirrhosis and ≥6 months follow-up, 226 (10.8%) developed HCC. The 10-year cumulative incidence of HCC varied by etiologic category from 22% in patients with viral hepatitis, to 16% in those with steatohepatitis and 5% in those with autoimmune liver disease (p<0.001). By multivariable Cox regression, age, sex, etiology and platelets were associated with HCC. Points were assigned in proportion to each hazard ratio to create the Toronto HCC Risk Index (THRI). The 10-year cumulative HCC incidence was 3%, 10% and 32% in the low (<120 points) medium (120-240) and high (>240) risk groups respectively, values that remained consistent after internal validation. External validation was performed on a cohort of patients with PBC, HBV and HCV cirrhosis (n= 1,144) with similar predictive ability (Harrell’s c-statistic 0.77) in the validation and derivation cohorts. Conclusion: HCC incidence varies markedly by etiology of cirrhosis. The THRI, using readily available clinical and laboratory parameters, has good predictive ability for HCC in patients with cirrhosis, and has been validated in an external cohort. This risk score may help to guide recommendations regarding HCC surveillance among patients with cirrhosis
Local ablation therapy with contrast-enhanced ultrasonography for hepatocellular carcinoma: a practical review
A successful program for local ablation therapy for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) requires extensive imaging support for diagnosis and localization of HCC, imaging guidance for the ablation procedures, and post-treatment monitoring. Contrast-enhanced ultrasonography (CEUS) has several advantages over computed tomography/magnetic resonance imaging (CT/MRI), including real-time imaging capability, sensitive detection of arterial-phase hypervascularity and washout, no renal excretion, no ionizing radiation, repeatability, excellent patient compliance, and relatively low cost. CEUS is useful for image guidance for isoechoic lesions. While contrast-enhanced CT/MRI is the standard method for the diagnosis of HCC and post-ablation monitoring, CEUS is useful when CT/MRI findings are indeterminate or CT/MRI is contraindicated. This article provides a practical review of the role of CEUS in imaging algorithms for pre- and post-ablation therapy for HCC
Metastatic low-grade endometrial stromal sarcoma of uterus presenting as a primary pancreatic tumor: case presentation and literature review
Abstract Background Metastatic tumors to the pancreas are uncommon, accounting for approximately 2% of pancreatic malignancies. The most common primary tumors to give rise to pancreatic metastases are carcinomas. Case presentation A 50-year old female patient was investigated for a cause of abdominal discomfort. She had a 2-year history of menorrhagia and dysmenorrhea which was ascribed to a fibroid uterus. On imaging, she was found to have a large solid and cystic mass in the tail of the pancreas. Imaging also confirmed a fibroid uterus. A distal pancreatectomy and splenectomy showed a 9 cm circumscribed mass within, and grossly confined to, the parenchyma of the pancreatic tail. Microscopically, the pancreatic lesion was lobulated, and well-circumscribed, but focally infiltrative. It comprised sheets of uniform spindled to epithelioid cells with round to oval nuclei, coarse to vesicular chromatin, visible nucleoli, nuclear grooves and clear to eosinophilic cytoplasm. Prominent arterioles were identified. The stroma was collagenized in areas. Occasional hemosiderin-laden macrophages were seen, and focal cystic change was present. There was no evidence of nuclear pleomorphism, mitotic activity or necrosis, and there was no evidence of endometriosis despite multiple sections being taken. Immunohistochemistry showed that the tumor cells were positive for CD10, estrogen receptor (ER), progesterone receptor (PR), Wilms tumor-1 (WT-1) and smooth muscle actin (SMA). RNA sequencing detected a PHF1 rearrangement. The morphological, immunohistochemical and molecular features were of a low-grade endometrial stromal sarcoma (LG-ESS). Subsequent total hysterectomy and bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy 3 months later, showed uterine fibroids and a 5 cm low-grade endometrial stromal sarcoma confined to the uterus, with lymphatic invasion. Conclusions To the best of our knowledge, this is the first documented case of metastatic endometrial stromal sarcoma of uterus presenting as a primary pancreatic neoplasm. An unexpected extra-uterine location and unusual presentation of ESS may make the diagnosis challenging, despite classic histological features. Morphological, immunohistochemical and molecular findings must be combined to render the correct diagnosis
Abdominal imaging findings in adult patients with Fontan circulation
Abstract The Fontan procedures, designed to treat paediatric patients with functional single ventricles, have markedly improved the patient’s survival into adulthood. The physiology of the Fontan circuit inevitably increases systemic venous pressure, which may lead to multi-system organ failure in the long-term follow-up. Fontan-associated liver disease (FALD) can progress to liver cirrhosis with signs of portal hypertension. Focal nodular hyperplasia-like nodules commonly develop in FALD. Imaging surveillance is often performed to monitor the progression of FALD and to detect hepatocellular carcinoma, which infrequently develops in FALD. Other abdominal abnormalities in post-Fontan patients include protein losing enteropathy and pheochromocytoma/paraganglioma. Given that these abdominal abnormalities are critical for patient management, it is important for radiologists to become familiar with the abdominal abnormalities that are common in post-Fontan patients on cross-sectional imaging. Teaching points • Fontan procedure for functional single ventricle has improved patient survival into adulthood. • Radiologists should be familiar with unique imaging findings of Fontan-associated liver disease. • Focal nodular hyperplasia-like nodules commonly develop in Fontan-associated liver disease. • Hepatocellular carcinoma, protein-losing enteropathy, pheochromocytoma/paraganglioma may develop