| Literature DB >> 34757483 |
Lea Hitpass1, Martina Distelmaier2, Ulf P Neumann3, Wenzel Schöning4, Peter Isfort2, Sebastian Keil2, Christiane K Kuhl2, Philipp Bruners2, Alexandra Barabasch2.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To examine the safety and short-term oncologic outcomes of computer-tomography-guided (CT-guided) irreversible electroporation (IRE) of recurrent, irresectable colorectal liver metastases (CRLM) after major hepatectomy deemed unsuitable for thermal ablation. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Twenty-three patients undergoing CT-guided IRE of recurrent CRLM after major hepatectomy were included in this study. All tumors were located adjacent to sole remaining intrahepatic blood vessels and bile ducts, precluding thermal ablation. Patients underwent systematic clinical and imaging follow-up, including magnetic resonance imaging of the liver at 1-month and 3-month intervals thereafter. Time to local and intrahepatic tumor progression within 12 and 36 months and associated risk factors were assessed using Kaplan Meier and Cox regression analysis, respectively.Entities:
Keywords: Colorectal liver metastases (CRLM); Efficacy; Irreversible electroporation (IRE); Recurrence; Safety
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34757483 PMCID: PMC8807435 DOI: 10.1007/s00270-021-02981-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cardiovasc Intervent Radiol ISSN: 0174-1551 Impact factor: 2.740
Target tumor localization
| Patient demographics of all 23 patients | |
|---|---|
| Age, y (mean, SD) | 60 ± 11 |
| Gender (M, F) | 15: 8 |
| Mean tumor size (mm, range) | 15 (4–39) |
| Left hepatic portal vein | 13 |
| Right hepatic portal vein | 2 |
| Anteromedial portal vein | 3 |
| Middle hepatic vein | 10 |
| Right hepatic vein | 2 |
| Vena cava inferior | 2 |
| Right trisectionectomy | 3 |
| Left trisectionectomy | 2 |
| Right hemihepatectomy | 1 |
| Bisectionectomy + min. 3 non-anatomical resections | 8 |
| Trisectionectomy + non-anatomical resection | 2 |
| Right hemihepatectomy + bisectionectomy (S II/III) | 7 |
Fig. 1Sample case. 71-year-old female patient with synchronous metastatic colorectal cancer to the liver who priory underwent right hepatectomy and bisegmentectomy of segments II and III. 5 months after surgery the patient was diagnosed with a new metastasis in the liver remnant, which, accordingly, consisted of segments I and IV, only. A multidisciplinary tumor board made the decision to perform IRE. A (CT in venous phase) and B (MRI: T2w TSE) show the metastases (arrowhead) located immediately adjacent to the sole remaining portal vein branch of segment IV (white open arrow). C (CT in arterial phase) and D (CT in portal venous phase) show the ablation area immediately after the IRE procedure. The ablation zone (thick arrow) extends beyond the portal vein branch (white open arrow). The adjacent vessels, portal vein branch (white open arrow) and segment-IV-artery (black open arrow) remained perfused. E (MRI: T2w TSE) and F (MRI: T1w GRE in portal venous phase) show the ablation area 4 weeks after IRE. The ablation zone (thick arrow) has decreased in size. However, the patient now shows evidence of a subsegmental cholestasis (E, white closed arrow) due to an IRE-induced bile duct stricture. Plasma bilirubin remained within normal limits (0.6 mg/dl). The adjacent portal vein branch (white open arrow) is still perfused without evidence of vessel thrombosis. G and H (MRI: T2w TSE) show the ablation area 3 (G) and 6 (H) months after IRE. The subsegmental cholestasis (closed arrow) remained stable and did not require treatment (plasma bilirubin 6 months after IRE was 0.42 mg/dl). The ablation zone (thick arrow) further decreased in size. Follow-up imaging did not show any evidence of distant tumor recurrence in and outside the liver. IRE = Irreversible electroporation; CT = computed tomography; MRI = magnetic resonance imaging; T2w = T2-weighted; TSE = turbo spin echo; T1w = T1-weighted; GRE = gradient echo
Fig. 2Flowchart–patients follow-up. Overview on patients oncological follow-up, IRE = irreversible electroporation
Fig. 3Twelve-month follow-up of local tumor progression
Fig. 4Twelve-month follow-up of intrahepatic tumor progression