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Radiology. Arterial enhancement: adenoma, FNH, hemangioma, HCC, NET metsPortal enhancement: CRC liver mets . Liver adenoma . Women 20 40 Right hepatic lobeTypically solitary 80%Multiple adenomas described in patients with prolonged contraceptive use, glycogen storage diseases, and hepatic ade
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1. Liver mass Mazen Hassanain
2. Radiology Arterial enhancement: adenoma, FNH, hemangioma, HCC, NET mets
Portal enhancement: CRC liver mets
3. Liver adenoma Women 20 40
Right hepatic lobe
Typically solitary 80%
Multiple adenomas described in patients with prolonged contraceptive use, glycogen storage diseases, and hepatic adenomatosis.
Size from 1 to 30 cm
Malignant transformation, spontaneous hemorrhage, and rupture
4. Adenomas are more numerous, larger, and more likely to bleed in patients with adenomas who take OCPs
Regression of adenomas has been observed after discontinuation of OCPs with recurrence during re-administration or pregnancy
59% maternal and 62% fetal mortality
5. Regular septa, portal tracts, bile ductules are absent, and few Kupffer cells
CT: Contrast-enhanced scans may show peripheral enhancement during the early phase with subsequent centripetal flow during the portal venous phase
MRI: hyperintense on T1 and on T2 images and enhance further with gadolinium administration
6. Treatment Symptoms, size, number, location, and certainty of the diagnosis.
OCP ?
Pregnant
Patients who present with abdominal pain and hypotension have a mortality of up to 20%
Emergency surgery is associated with a mortality of 6%
Preoperative selective arterial embolization using coils may control bleeding and reduce mortality
7. Liver hemangioma Most common benign mesenchymal hepatic tumors
40% multiple
Giant
High output cardiac failure, hypothyroidism and Kasabach-Merritt syndrome
Symptoms
8. US: well-demarcated homogeneous hyperechoic mass.
CT: peripheral nodular enhancement in the early phase, followed by a centripetal pattern or "filling in" during the late phase
MRI: smooth, well-demarcated homogeneous mass that has low signal intensity on T1-weighted images and is hyperintense on T2-weighted images
9. FNH Most common non-malignant hepatic tumor
predominantly in women
95% solitary and
Sinusoids and Kupffer cells are typically present,
10. US: central scar in only 20%
CT: FNH is isodense during the portal phase.
A central scar may be present in the fibrolamellar variant of HCC.
Sulfur colloid: 85%
MRI: isointense on T1-weighted images, an isointense to slightly hyperintense mass appears on T2-weighted images
11. HCC Chronic liver disease, particularly viral hepatitis
Median survival 6 to 20 months
Large size (Milan), vascular invasion, and nodal metastases are all associated with a poor outcome
AFP 200
12. US: 60% sensitivity and 97% spacifity
MRI: increased T2 signal intensity
No biopsy except if no risk factors
Dx either
Single typical imaging + AFP
Two typical imaging
13. CRC liver mets 50% will develop liver mets
Fong criteria
Pre-operative chemotherapy era
Surgical removal is the only hope for cure
RFA proved to be inferior to surgery but better than chemo only
Current survival is 28months with chemo only
14. NET liver mets Lung
Poorly-differentiated neuroendocrine carcinomas
Gastroenteropancreatic
Well-differentiated (eg, carcinoid tumors) if they are noninvasive and show benign behavior
Low-grade malignant (ie, with invasion of the muscularis propria or beyond, or metastases) are classified as well-differentiated neuroendocrine carcinomas
15. Symptoms:
None
Pressure
Hormonal
Diagnosis
Somatostatin receptor scintigraphy: 90%
Predicts response to treatment
50% in insulinoma
Less for liver mets
16. Chromogranin A
Most sensitive marker available and indicate prognosis
Treatment:
Curative intension
Symptoms control
Debuliking as may prolong survival
17. Octereotide
Resection (with or without primary)
RFA (no long term results)
Embolization (Bland, chemo, radio)
Systemic chemotherapy
Cytotoxic: Streptozocin, 5-fu, Interferon
Targeted therapy: VEGF, TKI
Liver transplantation: limited isolated disease with highly selected pts,
18. Prognosis Site of origin (rectum and appendix)
Size on discovery (less than 1cm)
The presence and extent of metastases on discovery
Histology
depth of tumor invasion, vascular and lymphatic invasion, cellular atypia, areas of focal necrosis, and an increased mitotic index
The presence of the carcinoid syndrome
Median survival 5 8 years