Literature DB >> 25969635

Imaging for assessment of treatment response in hepatocellular carcinoma: Current update.

Koichi Hayano1, Sang Ho Lee1, Dushyant V Sahani1.   

Abstract

Morphologic methods such as the Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors (RECIST) are considered as the gold standard for response assessment in the management of cancer. However, with the increasing clinical use of antineoplastic cytostatic agents and locoregional interventional therapies in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), conventional morphologic methods are confronting limitations in response assessment. Thus, there is an increasing interest in new imaging methods for response assessment, which can evaluate tumor biology such as vascular physiology, fibrosis, necrosis, and metabolism. In this review, we discuss various novel imaging methods for response assessment and compare them with the conventional ones in HCC.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Computed tomography perfusion; diffusion weighted imaging; dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging; hepatocellular carcinoma; positron emission tomography

Year:  2015        PMID: 25969635      PMCID: PMC4419421          DOI: 10.4103/0971-3026.155835

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Indian J Radiol Imaging        ISSN: 0970-2016


Introduction

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the sixth most common cancer and the third most common cause of cancer-related mortality worldwide.[1] Liver transplantation and resection are considered curative; however, most patients do not meet the selection criteria.[2] Molecular targeted agents such as sorafenib have shown a survival benefit for advanced HCC.[1345] Locoregional therapies (LRTs) deliver toxic thermal/chemical/radioactive doses to tumors with minimal toxicity to the normal tissue. Among the various LRTs, transarterial chemoembolization (TACE) and yttrium-90 radioembolization are palliative, whereas thermal ablative methods provide results equivalent to surgical resection in early stage HCC.[6789] Imaging plays an important role in the management of HCC, and the efficacy of treatment is usually monitored and assessed radiologically. Therapeutic response has been assessed by morphologic methods using various criteria such as the World Health Organization (WHO) criteria or the Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors (RECIST) in cancer treatment.[101112] These criteria are well established, and have been applied to response assessment of clinical trials in various kinds of tumors.[13] However, these morphologic evaluations have confronting limitations, including the presence of tumors that cannot be measured, poor measurement reproducibility, and mass lesions of unknown activity that persist following therapy.[12] Furthermore, with the increasing clinical use of molecular targeted agents in HCC, these criteria have confronting limitations in distinguishing viable tumor from necrotic or fibrotic tissue, and are not suitable to assess cellular death/apoptosis, because the new molecular targeted drugs act differently as compared to the traditional chemotherapeutic drugs and result in changes in blood flow (BF) of the tumor and cellular death without significant tumor shrinkage. Faced with these limitations of morphologic tumor assessment criteria, new reliable markers including serum markers, metabolic and functional imaging markers based on computed tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), or positron emission tomography (PET) to assess response to targeted agents or LRTs are desired urgently.[14151617] Imaging for tumor response assessment has evolved over the past few years as a result of advances in imaging modalities and the introduction of new functional imaging.[1819] In this review, we discuss the conventional and new imaging methods to assess tumor response in the management of HCC.

Morphologic response assessment

Clinical trials are mandatory in the evaluation of new tumor treatments. A common measure of the effect of an instituted therapy is the change of tumor size. In 1979, the WHO criteria established the concept of an overall assessment of tumor response by bidimensional lesion measurement, which is calculated by multiplying the maximum diameter by its longest perpendicular diameter, and determined the response to the therapy by evaluating the change from baseline while on treatment. Subsequently, RECIST criteria were introduced in 2000, updating the WHO criteria [Figure 1],[10] and brought many advances and facilitated comparison of the results among clinical trials. After extensive experience and validation in several chemotherapeutic trials in solid tumors, it was revised as RECIST 1.1 in 2009.[12] RECIST 1.1 is based on the measurement of a maximum of five target lesions, not exceeding two per organ; subsequently, the sum of the greatest diameters is recorded followed by a final classification.[12] Morphologic response criteria are summarized in Table 1. However, RECIST 1.1 has some limitations as follows: (1) it assumes that all lesions are spherical and that they decrease or increase in size uniformly; (2) necrosis is not taken into consideration in measuring the tumor size on the basis of RECIST, but recent LRTs or targeted therapies induce necrosis, which may indicate favorable tumor response;[2021] and (3) RECIST 1.1 does not define the standard phase of contrast material enhancement for measuring specific tumors. This criterion may be important if the lesion is best seen during either arterial or venous phase of enhancement.
Figure 1 (A-D)

According to RECIST, this patient was categorized as partial response [from (A) to (B), 33% reduction in tumor diameter], while WHO criteria categorized this patient as stable disease [from (C) to (D), 43% reduction in tumor area]

Table 1

Morphologic response criteria

According to RECIST, this patient was categorized as partial response [from (A) to (B), 33% reduction in tumor diameter], while WHO criteria categorized this patient as stable disease [from (C) to (D), 43% reduction in tumor area] Morphologic response criteria Quantification of volumetric change can be a more accurate measure of the actual tumor size change than uni- or bidimensional measurements because volumetric analyses compensate for actual tumor shape rather than assuming it to be a sphere, an ellipsoid, or a cube. Welsh et al.[22] reported that volumetric analysis might be the preferred method to detect tumor progression, showing that RECIST might overestimate tumor burden compared to volumetric analysis. Sohaib et al.[23] demonstrated the accuracy and reproducibility of CT volumetric measurements in their phantom study. However, the optimal volumetric response evaluation criteria have not been defined. Volumetric analysis can be time consuming and laborious because volumetric analysis still relies on manual trace of tumor margins. In the future, a computerized tumor segmentation method with high reproducibility and reliability may allow for automatic lesion contouring and volumetric calculation.

Tumor viability and density assessment

Generally, targeted therapy agents induce reduction in tumor vascularization, provocation of necrotic area and sometimes cavitation in solid tumors, and these features have been reported in various targeted therapies of HCC.[324252627] Furthermore, all LRTs attempt to induce necrosis of the tumor, which may delay tumor shrinkage during the early post-treatment period. Given these limitations of morphologic response criteria, the European Association for the Study of Liver (EASL) proposed new response criteria in 2000 to take into account tumor necrosis induced by treatment.[28] Accordingly, necrosis is defined as non-enhanced areas on contrast-enhanced (CE) CT/MR within the treated tumor. In 2008, the American Association for the Study of Liver Disease (AASLD) proposed the modified RECIST (mRECIST) criteria, which conceptualized viable tumor measurements. The major change is the definition of the target lesion, which is no longer the whole lesion but only the contrast-enhanced portion of the hepatic lesion on the arterial phase image [Figure 2].[2930] Previous reports demonstrated that EASL or mRECIST had better overall response rate than conventional morphologic criteria such as RECIST and WHO.[213132] In addition, these criteria have shown a better correlation with survival. Gillmore et al.[20] reported that responses measured by EASL and mRECIST after 2-3 months of TACE were independently associated with survival, whereas RECIST 1.1 had no significant association with survival. In a recent retrospective study of HCC patients treated with sorafenib, patients categorized as responders according to mRECIST had a longer overall survival (OS) than the non-responders.[33] Similarly, Shim et al.[34] reported that responses measured by mRECIST and EASL were independent predictors for OS following TACE. Prajapati et al.[32] reported significant associations of mRECIST and EASL with survival, and also suggested that the response based on mRECIST showed a better correlation with survival than that based on EASL. Therefore, response evaluation based on the enhancement may enable more accurate response assessment in terms of survival.
Figure 2

Arterial phase CECT of a 72-year-old man with HCC. The area of central necrosis increased after a tyrosine kinase inhibitor therapy (dashed line), while the change in tumor size was not obvious (solid line)

Arterial phase CECT of a 72-year-old man with HCC. The area of central necrosis increased after a tyrosine kinase inhibitor therapy (dashed line), while the change in tumor size was not obvious (solid line) The tumor density analysis on CECT can be used as an additional method for response assessment.[35] On treating gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST) with imatinib mesylate, there was a decrease in density of the tumor, which was measured by drawing a region of interest (ROI) circumscribing the boundary of the tumor on the portal venous phase, while no change was observed in tumor size.[3536] In GIST, a reduction in tumor Hounsfield Units (HU) greater than 15% was associated with better progression-free survival (PFS; Choi criteria).[37] In a recent study of HCC, Faivre et al.[38] demonstrated that the tumor response measured by Choi criteria was more sensitive than that measured by RECIST in detecting patients with longer time to progression after sunitinib therapy [Figure 3]. Criteria for tumor viability and density analysis are summarized in Table 2.
Figure 3

Portal-phase CECT of a 73-year-old woman with HCC. Tumor density changed obviously after antiangiogenic therapy

Table 2

Summary of response criteria based on tumor viability and density

Portal-phase CECT of a 73-year-old woman with HCC. Tumor density changed obviously after antiangiogenic therapy Summary of response criteria based on tumor viability and density

Diffusion-weighted imaging for response assessment

Motion of water molecules in tissue can be assessed by applying diffusion-weighting gradients to T2-weighted sequences. Various tissue types have unique diffusion characteristics, which are measured as the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) by the diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) performed with a different gradient duration and amplitude (b-values). Because the movement of water molecules in the body tissues is restricted by various factors including cells, macromolecules, and fibers in tissue compartments, DWI can be exploited in clinical practice for indirect assessment of tissue properties such as cellularity, gland formation, perfusion, fibrosis, and cell death.[3940] DWI has the potential to be an effective biomarker for monitoring the response to the treatment, and this potential in the management of cancer patients has been already discussed in a consensus meeting and a publication.[41] Several studies have reported that the ADC value of HCC significantly increased after TACE.[424344] A previous study reported that high baseline ADC value in HCC was associated with poor response to TACE, and that responding lesions showed a significant increase in ADC values than the non-responding ones after 48 h of TACE.[45] The results of antiangiogenic agents such as multitargeted tyrosine kinase inhibitors are controversial.[464748] Schraml et al.[46] reported that on treating HCC with sorafenib, the tumor ADC initially decreased after 2-4 weeks of therapy and was followed by an increase after 10 weeks of the therapy. But, Lewin et al.[47] reported that the tumor ADC did not significantly change after sunitinib therapy. In HCC treated with sunitinib, significant increase in tumor ADC was observed after 2 weeks of the therapy with no change in tumor size, based on RECIST and mRECIST [Figure 4].[48]
Figure 4 (A-D)

DWI at baseline (A) and post-treatment (B), and ADC maps at baseline (C) and post-treatment (D) of a 68-year-old man with HCC (arrows). ADC showed 55.1% increase after 2 weeks of tyrosine kinase inhibitor therapy

DWI at baseline (A) and post-treatment (B), and ADC maps at baseline (C) and post-treatment (D) of a 68-year-old man with HCC (arrows). ADC showed 55.1% increase after 2 weeks of tyrosine kinase inhibitor therapy DWI can be a desirable imaging biomarker because it needs no radiation exposure and no contrast material. However, there are several limitations. Various factors including magnetic field strength, technical factors (e.g. b-value selection) and the ROI setting may affect accurate ADC assessment.[4950] Furthermore, in the abdomen, the strong influence of motion due to breathing and vascular pulsation often results in image artifacts, which may lead to inaccurate ADC calculation.[51] Optimal time frame for precise response evaluation needs to be further studied.

Assessment of tumor vascular physiology

Because most of the targeted agents inhibit angiogenesis to control tumor progression, tissue perfusion analysis is a highly promising method to assess treatment response. In recent years, perfusion analysis has already been readily incorporated into the existing CT and MRI protocols, and most scanners are now equipped with sophisticated hardware platforms coupled with user-friendly software packages.[52] In dynamic contrast-enhanced (DCE) CT, the temporal changes in attenuation following intravenous contrast material administration can be analyzed using the mathematical kinetic models such as compartmental or deconvolution analysis for contrast material exchange.[5354] The common perfusion parameters of CT perfusion (CTP) are BF (flow rate through vasculature in a tissue), blood volume (BV, volume of flowing blood within a vasculature in a tissue), mean transit time (MTT, time taken to travel from artery to vein), and permeability surface area product (PS, total flux from plasma to interstitial space).[242554] Chen et al.[55] demonstrated that in HCC treated with TACE, changes in CTP parameters of tumors were correlated with different responses of HCC to TACE. According to their findings, tumors of responders showed significant reduction in hepatic arterial perfusion and BV, while those of non-responders did not show significant changes. Yang et al.[56] reported that the values of hepatic arterial perfusion, total liver perfusion, and hepatic arterial perfusion index in tumors significantly decreased 4 weeks after TACE in comparison to those before TACE. Previous studies reported reduction in BF or BV after 10-12 days of antiangiogenic therapy without any significant change in tumor size based on RECIST [Figure 5].[2425] Moreover, baseline CTP values have a potential to be a predictive biomarker for survival after antiangiogenic therapy.[25] Jiang et al.[25] demonstrated that HCC with higher baseline MTT correlated with favorable clinical outcome. A recent paper of CTP reported that the heterogeneity of tumor BF showed a good correlation with OS in HCC patients treated with an antiangiogenic agent.[57]
Figure 5 (A-D)

CECT images ((A) Baseline, (B) Post-treatment) and perfusion (blood volume) maps ((C) Baseline, (D) Post-treatment) of a 73-year-old woman with HCC. CTP demonstrated perfusion changes (–34% in blood volume) without significant changes in size and density after 2 weeks of antiangiogenic treatment

CECT images ((A) Baseline, (B) Post-treatment) and perfusion (blood volume) maps ((C) Baseline, (D) Post-treatment) of a 73-year-old woman with HCC. CTP demonstrated perfusion changes (–34% in blood volume) without significant changes in size and density after 2 weeks of antiangiogenic treatment Similarly, DCE-MRI also enables quantification of tumor vascular physiology. The common DCE-MRI parameters are vascular permeability (Ktrans) and reverse reflux rate constant between extracellular space and plasma (Kep) and the fractional extravascular, extracellular space (Ve).[2648585960] Several studies have demonstrated the value of DCE-MRI derived parameters for monitoring antiangiogenic therapies in various solid tumors.[2648585960] In advanced HCC, DCE-MRI demonstrated reduction in Ktrans during antiangiogenic treatment and the change of Ktrans during treatment was related to better PFS and OS in clinical trials of tyrosine kinase inhibitors [Figure 6].[26486061] In a phase I study of pazopanib, patients who had either a partial response or stable disease showed significant reduction in Ktrans.[61] In a study of HCC patients treated with sorafenib and metronomic tegafur/uracil, reduction in Ktrans on day 14 was found to be an independent predictor for PFS and OS.[60] In a phase II study of sunitinib, higher baseline Ktrans and larger drop in Ve correlated with longer PFS.[48]
Figure 6 (A and B)

Ktrans maps of a 69-year-old man with HCC at baseline (A) and at 2 weeks after tyrosine kinase inhibitor therapy (B). Ktrans of the tumor showed 79.8% reduction after the therapy, while the change in tumor size was not obvious

Ktrans maps of a 69-year-old man with HCC at baseline (A) and at 2 weeks after tyrosine kinase inhibitor therapy (B). Ktrans of the tumor showed 79.8% reduction after the therapy, while the change in tumor size was not obvious CTP may be superior to DCE-MRI in accessibility and availability.[6263] However, CTP essentially implies two major drawbacks: High radiation exposure and limited coverage of the anatomy. Thus, several efforts are being made with low-dose scanning techniques.[54] It is also still unclear which scanning protocol or mathematical model is optimal for abdominal organs. The definitions of the tumor ROI and the acquisition time also need further investigation in terms of reproducibility and reliability.[6465] On the contrary, DCE-MRI has the advantage in spatial resolution and soft-tissue contrast without ionizing radiation. However, it is still expensive and technically challenging, and requires longer image acquisition times in comparison to CT.[6263] DCE-MRI also lacks consensus on the standard protocol or the response evaluation criteria. However, given the importance of vascularization in cancer progression, perfusion technique can be a potentially powerful imaging biomarker to predict or detect early tumor response to the treatment.

Metabolic assessment

In PET, various kinds of tracers including 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (18F-FDG),[6667686970] 11C-acetate (11C-Act),[71727374] 11C- or 18F-F-choline (11C-Cho, 18F-F-Cho)[75] and 18F-fluorothymidine (18F-FLT)[76] enable quantitative measurement of various biological features such as metabolism, lipogenesis, cellular membrane turnover, and proliferation. It is, therefore, possible to noninvasively obtain information on a number of different biological properties of HCC. Integrated PET/CT and PET/MRI instruments have the potential for providing unique biological information in a single patient examination. 18F-FDG is the most widely available tracer, and 18F-FDG PET can assess the glucose metabolism in tumor. In HCC treated with TACE, an increase of 18F-FDG uptake in HCC was significantly associated with tumor burden and could provide effective information on the prognosis of the treatment response.[77] In addition, 18F-FDG uptake after TACE might be a favorable marker to assess tumor viability after TACE.[7378] Similar findings have been reported in detecting local tumor progression following radiofrequency ablation of HCC.[79] Kim et al.[80] reported that in HCC patients treated with chemoradiation therapy, low 18F-FDG uptake was associated with longer PFS and OS and that the high 18F-FDG uptake group was more likely to have extrahepatic metastasis within 6 months. However, because the expression of glucose-6-phosphatase enabling 18F-FDG to accumulate in tumor cells varies widely in HCC, 18F-FDG PET shows poor sensitivity for detection of HCC, ranging from 50 to 55%.[8182838485] Thus, the role of 18F-FDG PET in assessing treatment response is still limited in HCC, and further investigations are needed. HCC-specific tracers may be the key in the future.

Conclusion

Morphologic assessment, which has served as the gold standard for a long time, is confronting limitations. However, recent advances in imaging modalities and the introduction of new functional imaging pave the way to assess tumor response based on tumor biology in vivo. As antiangiogenic therapy and LRTs have become the standard of care for HCC patients, such functional imaging techniques for response assessment are of paramount importance. In this review, we suggest that the evaluation of tumor response should include not only the morphologic change but also functional changes such as enhancement, density, perfusion, diffusion, and metabolism. Functional imaging will serve as a biomarker for response assessment of HCC, and radiologists must become familiar with these new techniques.
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1.  New guidelines to evaluate the response to treatment in solid tumors. European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer, National Cancer Institute of the United States, National Cancer Institute of Canada.

Authors:  P Therasse; S G Arbuck; E A Eisenhauer; J Wanders; R S Kaplan; L Rubinstein; J Verweij; M Van Glabbeke; A T van Oosterom; M C Christian; S G Gwyther
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Review 2.  Perfusion CT for the assessment of tumour vascularity: which protocol?

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Journal:  Br J Radiol       Date:  2003       Impact factor: 3.039

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Authors:  Akio Ogura; Katsumi Hayakawa; Tosiaki Miyati; Fumie Maeda
Journal:  Eur J Radiol       Date:  2009-07-31       Impact factor: 3.528

5.  PET/CT in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma using [(18)F]fluorocholine: preliminary comparison with [(18)F]FDG PET/CT.

Authors:  Jean-Noël Talbot; Fabrice Gutman; Laetitia Fartoux; Jean-Didier Grange; Nathalie Ganne; Khaldoun Kerrou; Dany Grahek; Françoise Montravers; Raoul Poupon; Olivier Rosmorduc
Journal:  Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging       Date:  2006-06-27       Impact factor: 9.236

6.  CT assessment of tumour response to treatment: comparison of linear, cross-sectional and volumetric measures of tumour size.

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Journal:  Br J Radiol       Date:  2000-11       Impact factor: 3.039

7.  Evaluating local hepatocellular carcinoma recurrence post-transcatheter arterial chemoembolization: is diffusion-weighted MRI reliable as an indicator?

Authors:  Satoshi Goshima; Masayuki Kanematsu; Hiroshi Kondo; Ryujiro Yokoyama; Yusuke Tsuge; Yoshimune Shiratori; Minoru Onozuka; Noriyuki Moriyama
Journal:  J Magn Reson Imaging       Date:  2008-04       Impact factor: 4.813

8.  PET imaging of hepatocellular carcinoma with 2-deoxy-2[18F]fluoro-D-glucose, 6-deoxy-6[18F] fluoro-D-glucose, [1-11C]-acetate and [N-methyl-11C]-choline.

Authors:  N Salem; Y Kuang; F Wang; G T Maclennan; Z Lee
Journal:  Q J Nucl Med Mol Imaging       Date:  2008-11-28       Impact factor: 2.346

9.  Evaluation of tumor response after locoregional therapies in hepatocellular carcinoma: are response evaluation criteria in solid tumors reliable?

Authors:  Alejandro Forner; Carmen Ayuso; María Varela; Jordi Rimola; Amelia J Hessheimer; Carlos Rodriguez de Lope; María Reig; Luís Bianchi; Josep M Llovet; Jordi Bruix
Journal:  Cancer       Date:  2009-02-01       Impact factor: 6.860

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Authors:  Zheng Yuan; Xiao-Dan Ye; Sheng Dong; Li-Chao Xu; Xue-Yuan Xu; Shi-Yuan Liu; Xiang-Sheng Xiao
Journal:  Eur J Radiol       Date:  2009-06-18       Impact factor: 3.528

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