| Literature DB >> 28936404 |
Arno Kornberg1, Martina Schernhammer1, Helmut Friess1.
Abstract
Liver transplantation (LT) has become standard of care in patients with non-resectable early stage hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in liver cirrhosis. Currently, patient selection for LT is strictly based on tumor size and number, provided by the Milan criteria. This may, however, exclude patients with advanced tumor load but favourable biology from a possibly curative treatment option. It became clear in recent years that biological tumor viability rather than tumor macromorphology determines posttransplant outcome. In particular, microvascular invasion and poor grading reflect tumor aggressiveness and promote the risk of tumor relapse. Pretransplant biopsy is not applicable due to tumor heterogeneity and risk of tumor cell seeding. 18F-fludeoxyglucose (18F-FDG) positron emission tomography (PET), an established nuclear imaging device in oncology, was demonstrated to non-invasively correlate with unfavorable histopathologic features. Currently, there is an increasing amount of evidence that 18F-FDG-PET is very useful for identifying eligible liver transplant patients with HCC beyond standard criteria but less aggressive tumor properties. In order to safely expand the HCC selection criteria and the pool of eligible liver recipients, tumor evaluation with 18F-FDG-PET should be implemented in pretransplant decision process.Entities:
Keywords: 18F-fludeoxyglucose positron emission tomography; Hepatocellular carcinoma; Liver transplantation; Tumor biology; Tumor recurrence
Year: 2017 PMID: 28936404 PMCID: PMC5606969 DOI: 10.14218/JCTH.2017.00014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Transl Hepatol ISSN: 2225-0719
18F-FDG-PET for predicting tumor viability following LRTT in a neoadjuvant approach
| Authors | Technique of LRTT | n | Stratification of subsets | Main study results |
| Torizuka | TACE using iodized oil | 30 | Type A HCC: Increased FDG uptake (SUV 1.07–2.66) | Viable tumor following TACE in type A and B HCC; more than 90% necrosis in type C tumor; tumor necrosis rate <75% in SUV <0.6 and ≈ 100% in SUV >0.6. |
| Cascales Campos | TACE | 6 | Post-TACE SUV < vs. ≥3 | Decrease of SUV to <3 post-TACE was associated with necrosis rate >80% on explant histopathology. |
| Cascales Campos | TACE | 20 | Post-TACE SUV < vs. ≥3 | Decreases of SUV to <3 post-TACE was associated with necrosis rate >70% on explant histopathology and adequate 1- (100%) and 3-year (80%) survival post-LT. |
| Kornberg | TACE and RFA | 59 | Increased vs. not increased 18F-FDG uptake (PET+ vs. PET− status) | PET− status was identified as the only independent clinical predictor (HR = 12.4; 95%CI 3.1–49.0; |
| Kim | TACE with lipiodol | 91 | Grade I: no 18F-FDG uptake or 18F-FDG uptake lower than in surrounding liver tissue | 18F-FDG uptake correlated with histopathologic grade in treatment-naïve tumors but not in lipiodolized HCCs after TACE; 18F-FDG PET/CT showed a high diagnostic sensitivity and a moderate specificity in evaluating viability of lipiodolized HCC nodules. |
Abbreviations: 18F-FDG, 18F-fludeoxyglucose; CI, confidence interval; HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma; HR, hazard ratio; PET, positron emission tomography; SUV, standard uptake value;TACE, transarterial chemoembolization.
18F-FDG-PET for predicting outcome after curative liver resection for HCC
| Authors | n | Stratification of subsets | Major study results |
| Torizuka | 17 | -------------------- | Pre-resection SUV was 6.89 ± 3.39 in low grade and 3.21 ± 0.58 in high grade tumors ( |
| Kobayashi | 60 | High (≥3.2) vs. low (<3.2) SUVmax | Sensitivity and specificity of SUVmax ≥3.2 for predicting MVI were 77.8% and 74%. It increased to 88.9% and 82.4% by combining SUVmax with lens culinaris agglutinin a-reactive AFP. |
| Baek | 54 | Low (<6.36) vs. high (≥6.36) TMR | TMR ratio on pre-resection 18F-FDG PET correlated with MVI ( |
| Ochi | 89 | High (≥8.8) vs. low (<8.8) SUVmax | SUVmax correlated significantly with tumor distance to microsatellite lesion pattern (R = 0.57; |
| Hatano | 31 | High (>2) vs. low (<2) SUV ratio | Overall 5-year survival rate was 63% in the high and 29% in the low SUV ratio subsets ( |
| Seo | 70 | Low (<5) vs. high (≥5) SUV | Overall and recurrence-survival rates were significantly lower in the high than in the low FDG uptake groups ( |
| Han | 298 | Low (<3.5) vs. high (>3.5) SUV | Preoperative SUV >3.5 was identified as an independent predictor of high grade tumor (HR = 3.305; 95%CI: 1.214–8.996; |
| Ahn | 93 | Low (<4) vs. high (≥4) SUVmax | SUVmax and TNR correlated significantly ( |
| Kitamura | 63 | Low (<2) vs. high (≥2) TNR | TNR ≥2 was identified as an independent predictor for time interval to HCC recurrence. It was significantly lower in patients with recurrence beyond 1 year (4.4 ± 1.6; |
Abbreviations: 18F-FDG, 18F-fludeoxyglucose; CI, confidence interval; HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma; HR, hazard ratio; MC, Milan criteria; MVI, microvascular invasion; PET, positron emission tomography; SUV, standard uptake value; TMR, tumor-to-muscle ratio; TNR, tumor-to-nontumor uptake ratio.
18F-FDG-PET for predicting aggressive histopathologic features in liver transplant patients with HCC
| Authors | n | PET−/PET+ (n) | Predicting poor grading (Sensitivity/Specificity/PPV/NPV/Accuracy) | Predicting MVI (Sensitivity/Specificity/PPV/NPV/Accuracy) |
| Yang | 38 | 25/13 | 47.8%/85.7%/84.6%/50%/60.5% | 77.8%/79.3%/53.8%/92%/78.9% |
| Kornberg | 42 | 26/16 | 83.3%/69.4%/31.3%/96.1%/71.4% | 82.3%/92%/87.5%/88.5%/88.1% |
| Kornberg | 91 | 36/19 | 76.4%/70.3%/37.1%/92.9%/71.4% | 81.1%/90.7%/85.7%/87.5%/86.8% |
| Lee | 191 | 136/55 | 37.3%/81.7%/75.5%/46%/51.3% | 45.4%/83.9%/66%/69.1%/67.5% |
| Lee | 280 | 190/90 | (beyond MC) | (beyond MC) |
| Hsu | 147 | 117/30 | 100%/80.7%/6.7%/100%/81% | 30.3%/85.7%/56.7%/66.7%/64.6% |
Abbreviations: MC, Milan criteria; NPV, negative predictive value; PET, positron emission tomography; PPV, positive predictive value.
18F-FDG-PET for predicting outcome after liver transplantation for HCC
| Authors | n | n (PET−/PET+) | Overall outcome (PET−/PET+) | Outcome beyond standard criteria (PET−/PET+) |
| Yang | 38 | 25/13 | Overall 2y RFS: 85.1%/46.1% | RR beyond Milan: 60%/57% |
| Lee | 59 | 38/21 | Overall 2y RFS: 97%/42% | RR beyond Milan: 9%/67% |
| Kornberg | 42 | 26/16 | Overall 3y RFS: 93%/35% | RR beyond Milan: 11.1%/53.8% |
| Kornberg | 55 | 36/19 | Overall 3y RFS: 93.3%/46.9% | 3y RFS beyond Milan: 80%/44% |
| Kornberg | 91 | 56/35 | Overall RR: 3.6%/54.3% | 5y RFS beyond Milan: 81%/21% |
| Lee | 191 | 136/55 | 3y RFS: 86.8%/57.1% | – |
| Lee | 280 | 190/90 | 5y RFS within Milan: 92.3%/76.3% | 5y RFS beyond Milan: 73.3%/37.5% |
| Lee | 280 | |||
| Hsu | 147 | 117/30 | Overall 5y RFS: 84.8%/68.3% | |
| Hong | 123 | 87/36 | Overall 5y RFS: 93.4%/49.1% | |
| Takade | 182 | 139/43 | Overall RR: 12%/28% |
Abbreviations: AFP, alpha-fetoprotein; NCCK, National Cancer Center Korea; OS, overall survival; PET, positron emission tomography; RFS, recurrence-free survival; RR, recurrence rate; UCSF, University of California San Francisco.
Fig. 1.Selection algorithm using 18F-FDG-PET in HCC patients meeting morphometric standard criteria (A) or exceeding morphometric standard criteria (B).