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Pathological Appearance of Focal Liver Reactions after Radiotherapy for Hepatocellular Carcinoma.

Masahiro OkadaKazushi NumataHiromi NihonmatsuKengo TomitaAtsuya TakedaKenichiro TagoTomoko HyodoTakahisa EriguchiMasayuki Nakano
Published in: Diagnostics (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
We studied five pathological specimens from five patients at 1.5, 3.0, 4.0, 13.5, and 14.0 months after radiotherapy for HCC. Four needle biopsies were obtained to investigate liver parenchyma of focal liver reaction (FLR) around treated HCC, when patients had newly developed HCC or local recurrence appeared in the liver. Liver resection was performed in one case where insufficient radiotherapy effect for HCC was suspected. In all patients, FLR was recognized as a hypervascular area around the HCC on enhanced CT and enhanced Gd-EOB-DTPA (EOB-MRI). Liver specimens were analyzed to assess the pathological characteristics of FLR. FLR was recognized as prolonged liver enhancement in enhanced CT and EOB-MRI. From pathological understanding, sinusoidal dilatation with degeneration and desquamation was caused by direct endothelial cell injury following radiotherapy. Hepatocytes and endothelium fell off, and so the portal tract came close, and hepatic arteries increase simultaneously, resulting in FLR around HCC after radiotherapy. In conclusion, the prolapse of hepatocytes and sinusoidal endothelium induced neovascularization of hepatic arteries due to the repair mechanisms; in addition, these prolapse may shorten the distance between each portal region and the hepatic arteries flowing through the portal region become more prominent in FLR.
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