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Query: UMLS:C0015695 (
fatty liver
)
13,941
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In order to discuss the role of preoperative chemotherapy for colorectal
liver metastases
, which is used frequently before hepatic resection, even in patients with resectable disease at presentation, we herein report the development of two complications, partial portal vein thrombosis and
hepatic steatosis
with lobular inflammation, during the course of preoperative chemotherapy with FOLFIRI plus bevacizumab for colorectal
liver metastases
, which recognition led to timely discontinuation of chemotherapy as well as a change in the surgical strategy to resect the tumors and the damaged liver through advanced techniques. We conclude that duration of treatment and drug doses and combinations may impact the development of chemotherapy-induced liver injury. Surgeons and medical oncologists must work together to devise safe, rational, and oncologically appropriate treatments for patients with multiple colorectal
liver metastases
, and to improve the understanding of the pathogenesis of chemotherapy-induced liver injury.
...
PMID:Portal thrombosis and steatosis after preoperative chemotherapy with FOLFIRI-bevacizumab for colorectal liver metastases. 1707 91
In this review, standards of diagnosis and treatment of colorectal
liver metastases
are described on the basis of a workshop discussion. Algorithms of care for patients with synchronous / metachronous colorectal
liver metastases
or locoregional recurrent tumour are presented. Surgical resection is the procedure of choice in the curative treatment of
liver metastases
. The decision about the resection of
liver metastases
should consider the following parameters: 1. General operability of the patient (comorbidity); 2. Achievability of an R 0 situation: i. if necessary, in combination with ablative methods, ii. if necessary, neoadjuvant chemotherapy, iii. the ability to eradicate extrahepatic tumour manifestations; 3. Sufficient volume of the liver remaining after resection ("future liver remnant = FLR): i. if necessary, in combination with portal vein embolisation or two-stage hepatectomy; 4. The feasibility to preserve two contiguous hepatic segments with adequate vascular inflow and outflow as well as biliary drainage; 5. Tumour biological aspects ("prognostic variables"); 6. Experience of the surgeon and centre! Extrahepatic disease does not contraindicate hepatectomy for colorectal
liver metastases
provided a complete resection of both intra- and extrahepatic disease is feasible. Even in bilobar colorectal metastases and 5 or more tumours in the liver, a complete tumour resection has been described. The type of resection (hepatic wedge resection or anatomic resection) does not influence the recurrence rate. Preoperative volumetry is indicated when major hepatic resection is planned. The FLR should be 25 % in patients with normal liver, 40 % in patients who have received intensive chemotherapy or in cases of
fatty liver
, liver fibrosis or diabetes, and 50-60 % in patients with cirrhosis. In patients with initially unresectable colorectal
liver metastases
, preoperative chemotherapy enables complete resection in 15-30 % of the cases, whereas the value of neoadjuvant chemotherapy in patients with resectable
liver metastases
has not been sufficiently supported. In situ ablative procedures (radiofrequency ablation = RFA and laser-induced interstitial thermotherapy = LITT) are local therapy options in selected patients who are not candidates for resection (central recurrent
liver metastases
, bilobar multiple metastases and high-risk resection or restricted patient operability). Patients with tumours larger than 3 cm have a high local recurrence rate after percutaneous RFA and are not optimal candidates for this procedure. The physician's experience influences the results significantly, both after hepatectomy and after in situ ablation. Therefore, patients with colorectal
liver metastases
should be treated in centres with experience in liver surgery.
...
PMID:[Diagnosis and treatment of colorectal liver metastases - workflow]. 1856 94
The use of newer chemotherapeutic agents before resection of colorectal cancer
liver metastases
has been linked with parenchymal liver injury, in particular preoperative irinotecan and oxaliplatin with chemotherapy-associated steatohepatitis (CASH) and vascular parenchymal injury, respectively. We retrospectively assessed 334 cases from 2002 to 2007 and correlated pathologic findings with chemotherapy use and perioperative course. Features of
fatty liver
disease were graded according to established schemes, and several features of vascular injury, including sinusoidal dilation, nodular regenerative hyperplasia and parenchymal extinction lesions (PELs), were also scored semiquantitatively and a combined vascular injury (CVI) score was determined. Moderate and severe fatty injury was uncommon with steatohepatitis detected in 8 cases (2.4%), 7 of whom did not receive chemotherapy. Multivariate analysis showed steatosis greater than 33% and steatohepatitis were independently associated with Body Mass Index of 30 or more (P<0.001) but not chemotherapy. Vascular injuries were detected in 117 cases, were significantly associated with oxaliplatin, and the combined assessment of vascular features (a CVI score of 3 or more) was more strongly associated with oxaliplatin (P=0.0004) than any one feature in isolation. Perioperative outcome was not associated with parenchymal injury or preoperative chemotherapy. We conclude that although CASH is uncommon in this population vascular injury is frequently seen in resection specimens, but pathologic examination limited to sinusoidal dilation misses the majority of these. Semiquantitative measurement enables reproducible assessment of vascular injuries, allows comparison between studies, and may help inform future treatment decisions in patients with limited hepatic reserve.
...
PMID:Chemotherapy-induced liver injury in metastatic colorectal cancer: semiquantitative histologic analysis of 334 resected liver specimens shows that vascular injury but not steatohepatitis is associated with preoperative chemotherapy. 2042 79
Chemotherapy is being administered to an increasing number of patients with colorectal
liver metastases
(CRLM), whether they have resectable disease or not. Although this may be appropriate to downstage patients with unresectable disease, and offers theoretical advantages to those who have resectable disease, there is a price to be paid in the development of chemotherapy-induced hepatic injuries (CIHI). These include chemotherapy-associated
fatty liver
diseases and sinusoidal injuries. The main chemotherapeutic agents currently used in the adjuvant setting for colorectal carcinoma, and the neoadjuvant treatment of CRLM include 5-flurouracil, oxaliplatin and irinotecan, and while there are non-specific and overlapping injury profiles, oxaliplatin does appear to be primarily associated with sinusoidal injury and irinotecan with steatohepatitis. In this review, the rationale for administering chemotherapy to patients with CRLM is presented, and the problems this brings are outlined. The specific injury patterns will be detailed, as well as the data correlating specific chemotherapy regimens to these injury patterns. Finally, the clinical outcomes of patients with CRLM who undergo neoadjuvant chemotherapy followed by hepatic resection will be considered. The need for methods to identify patients at risk of CIHI and to recognize established CIHI prior to surgery will be emphasized.
...
PMID:The developing clinical problem of chemotherapy-induced hepatic injury. 2286 36
Colorectal cancer is a leading cause of death with mortality determined predominately by metastatic involvement of the liver. Treatment of
liver metastases
continues to evolve and imaging plays an essential role in initial staging, preoperative planning, and treatment monitoring. This review article discusses the current role of imaging in the management of patients with colorectal
liver metastases
. Particular challenges such as
hepatic steatosis
, disappearing metastases, and following treated lesions are addressed.
...
PMID:Colorectal liver metastases: state of the art imaging. 2908 39
Various factors are reported to affect the risk of local recurrence after resection of colorectal
liver metastases
. This article discusses the findings of a recent study that investigated the effect of
fatty liver
disease on the risk of recurrence.
...
PMID:Metastatic colorectal cancer outcome and fatty liver disease. 2356 18
Area of fat sparing in
fatty liver
is known to pose a diagnostic challenge in an oncological setting, especially in cancers with higher propensity for
liver metastases
. We report an unusual appearance of hepatic metastases in a fat spared area, on both computed tomography (CT) and positron emission tomography (PET), in a combined 18 fluorine-fluorodeoxyglucose (18 F-FDG) PET/CT study done in metastatic adenocarcinoma of colon.
...
PMID:Hepatic metastasis disguised as fat spared area in the background of fatty liver: Detection on FDG PET/CT. 2416 15
Colorectal cancer is the third most common cancer diagnosed in both men and women in the United States. Liver is a common site of tumor spread and in approximately 30% of the cases; synchronous liver disease is present at the time of diagnosis. Early detection of
liver metastases
is crucial to appropriately select patients who may benefit from hepatic resection among those needing chemotherapy, to improve 5-year survival. Advances in imaging techniques have contributed greatly to the management of these patients. Multidetector computed tomography is the most useful test for initial staging and in posttreatment surveillance settings. Magnetic resonance imaging is considered superior to multidetector computed tomography and positron emission tomography for the detection and characterization of small lesions and for liver evaluation in the presence of background
fatty liver
changes. Positron emission tomography-computed tomography has a problem-solving role in the detection of distant metastasis and in posttreatment evaluation. The advanced imaging methods also serve a role in selecting appropriate patients for radiologically targeted therapies and in monitoring response to conventional and novel therapies.
...
PMID:Current status of imaging and emerging techniques to evaluate liver metastases from colorectal carcinoma. 2450 7
An obese 55-year-old woman with nonalcoholic
fatty liver
disease presented 7 years after resection of a T3N1 ileal carcinoid tumor with an elevated chromogranin A, multifocal metastatic disease to the liver, and carcinoid syndrome. She underwent right hepatic artery yttrium-90 (Y90) radioembolization, followed a month later by selective Y90 treatment to segment IV. She then presented to our clinic 10 months later, remaining symptomatic with flushing, diarrhea, anxiety, myalgia, pain, and persistent night sweats despite Sandostatin administration. At least 11 tumors were identified in the right lobe of the liver and three in segment IV on liver-specific imaging. These lesions were stable over a year with no new lesions. At exploration, there was marked hypertrophy of the left lateral segment due to the yttrium-90 treatment of segments IV-VIII, corresponding with preoperative volumetrics predicting a functional liver remnant (FLR) of 40% after extended right hepatectomy. The right lobe and segment IV were fibrotic, hard, and visibly damaged. The gland had a thick, fibrotic capsule, and the parenchyma was dense, inflexible, and difficult to dissect, consistent with the previously reported morbidity of these operations. Extended right hepatectomy was performed. Final pathology demonstrated 15 foci of metastatic well-differentiated neuroendocrine carcinoma that were negative for necrosis, as was expected given her continued symptoms despite radioembolization. Numerous amorphous spheres, frequently in clusters, were present in segments IV-VIII in vessels and approximating tumors consistent with prior Y90 radioembolization. The patient had an uneventful post-operative recovery and remains symptom free on follow-up. Treatment options for metastatic tumors to the liver have increased in recent years and currently include radioembolization in selected patients. Surgical cytoreduction and complete metastasectomy continue to offer improvement in symptoms, quality of life, and survival in patients with neuroendocrine
liver metastases
; however, hepatectomy after radioembolization is unique and carries increased morbidity/mortality, likely due to Y90-induced liver fibrosis. We demonstrate images of fibrotic yttrium-90 radiation-affected liver and histological sections of radioembolic microbeads in blood vessels and distributed around resected tumors.
...
PMID:Hepatectomy After Yttrium-90 (Y90) Radioembolization-Induced Liver Fibrosis. 2684 53
Liver magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is becoming the gold standard in liver metastasis detection and treatment response assessment. The most sensitive magnetic resonance sequences are diffusion-weighted images and hepatobiliary phase images after Gd-EOB-DTPA. Peripheral ring enhancement, diffusion restriction, and hypointensity on hepatobiliary phase images are hallmarks of
liver metastases
. In patients with normal ultrasonography, computed tomography (CT), and positron emission tomography (PET)-CT findings and high clinical suspicion of metastasis, MRI should be performed for diagnosis of unseen metastasis. In melanoma, colon cancer, and neuroendocrine tumor metastases, MRI allows confident diagnosis of treatment-related changes in liver and enables differential diagnosis from primary liver tumors. Focal nodular hyperplasia-like nodules in patients who received platinum-based chemotherapy, hypersteatosis, and focal fat can mimic metastasis. In cancer patients with
fatty liver
, MRI should be preferred to CT. Although the first-line imaging for metastases is CT, MRI can be used as a problem-solving method. MRI may be used as the first-line method in patients who would undergo curative surgery or metastatectomy. Current limitation of MRI is low sensitivity for metastasis smaller than 3mm. MRI fingerprinting, glucoCEST MRI, and PET-MRI may allow simpler and more sensitive diagnosis of liver metastasis.
...
PMID:Magnetic Resonance Imaging of Liver Metastasis. 2798 72
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