Noninvasive Visualization of Tumor Blood Vessels within Hepatocellular Carcinoma by Application of Superb Microvascular Imaging to Contrast-Enhanced Ultrasonography.
Yu OtaKazunobu AsoHideki YokooMikihiro FujiyaPublished in: Diagnostics (Basel, Switzerland) (2024)
The combination or sequential use of systemic therapies, such as lenvatinib and locoregional therapies, can improve the curability rate of hepatocellular carcinoma. This is based on the notion that lenvatinib remodels abnormal tumor vessels into normal vessels, potentially enhancing the efficacy of locoregional therapies. In this case report, we achieved noninvasive visualization of tumor blood vessels by applying superb microvascular imaging (SMI) to contrast-enhanced ultrasonography (CEUS). A man in his 80s with a borderline resectable hepatocellular carcinoma received preoperative therapy using lenvatinib. The patient achieved a complete response after lenvatinib therapy, underwent hepatectomy, and maintained a cancer-free status. CEUS and SMI revealed a decrease in tumor blood vessels at 1 week after lenvatinib administration and a decrease in tumor perfusion at 2 weeks. Although CEUS alone is adequate for noninvasive real-time evaluation of tumor perfusion, it is not sufficient to achieve accurate assessments of tumor blood vessels. We performed a noninvasive time-course evaluation of vascular normalization after lenvatinib administration by applying SMI. The evaluation of vascular normalization with lenvatinib therapy using CEUS and SMI can support the decision to proceed to conversion therapies.
Keyphrases
- contrast enhanced
- magnetic resonance imaging
- diffusion weighted
- magnetic resonance
- case report
- computed tomography
- high resolution
- diffusion weighted imaging
- patients undergoing
- squamous cell carcinoma
- clinical trial
- contrast enhanced ultrasound
- young adults
- radiation therapy
- papillary thyroid
- fluorescence imaging
- replacement therapy
- preterm birth
- lymph node metastasis