| Literature DB >> 31656297 |
Kenichiro Araki1, Norifumi Harimoto1, Ryo Muranushi1, Kouki Hoshino1, Kei Hagiwara1, Takahiro Yamanaka1, Norihiro Ishii1, Mariko Tsukagoshi1, Takamichi Igarashi1, Akira Watanabe1, Norio Kubo1, Ken Shirabe1.
Abstract
Background : Systemic chemotherapy can drastically downsize metastatic liver tumors and these small liver lesions could sometimes be difficult for surgeons to detect during hepatectomy. We assessed the usefulness of intraoperative real-time virtual sonography (RVS) with contrast-enhanced ultrasonography (CEUS) using 'Sonazoid' contrast agent (RVS-CEUS). Methods : We performed the intraoperative RVS-CEUS technique on 10 tumor lesions in six cases, which were scheduled for hepatic resection of < 10 mm in diameter in our liver metastases series. These lesions were preoperatively diagnosed by contrast enhanced-computed tomography (CE-CT) or Gadolinium-ethoxybenzyl-diethylenetriamine pentaacetic acid (Gd-EOB-DTPA)-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (EOB-MRI). We assessed the detectability of a tumor with RVS-CEUS during surgery and compared it with that of preoperative CE-CT or EOB-MRI. Results : Detectability of RVS-CEUS for 10 small lesions was 90% (n = 9/10) and that of other preoperative modalities were 50% (n = 5/10, CE-CT) and 100% (n = 10/10, EOB-MRI). Minimum tumor size detected was 3.0 mm in diameter, and maximum depth of detection with RVS-CEUS was 43.5 mm ; these results could be an advantage when compared with other intraoperative diagnostic modalities. Conclusion : Intraoperative RVS-CEUS was useful for detecting small metastatic liver lesions after chemotherapy and could be an effective intraoperative diagnostic technique for hepatic resection of a size < 10 mm. J. Med. Invest. 66 : 319-323, August, 2019.Entities:
Keywords: hepatectomy, chemotherapy; real-time virtual sonography; small liver metastatic lesion; sonazoid enhancement
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31656297 DOI: 10.2152/jmi.66.319
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Invest ISSN: 1343-1420