Abstract

To assess if intra-tumoural fat on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) affects the ultrasonographic(US) visibility of small (≤3 cm) hepatocellular carcinomas (HCC) during radiofrequency ablation (RFA). Institutional review board approval was obtained. A retrospective review of all patients who underwent image-guided ablation between 1 January 2010 and 31 April 2015 was performed. Patients with HCC who underwent US RFA were included. Inclusion criteria included small tumours (≤3 cm), treatment-naive cases or new focus of HCC in a different and untreated segment, and pre-procedural MRI. The presence of intra-tumoural fat was determined retrospectively via in-and-out-of-phase MRI. Other factors that potentially affect ultrasonographic visibility, such as background fatty liver, presence of cirrhosis, tumour size, and distance from diaphragm, were recorded. Ninety procedures performed on 74 patients (62 men and 12 women; mean age: 67.3 years; range: 39-88 years). Seventy-two tumours were visible on US (hypoechoic n=35, hyperechoic n=28, heterogeneous n=9). Intra-tumoural fat was seen in 23 tumours (25.6%, hyperechoic n=17, hypoechoic n=6). The presence of intra-tumoural fat (p=0.005) and distance from diaphragm (p=0.007) were found to be statistically significant factors affecting tumour visibility on planning US. The presence of background fatty liver (p=0.485), cirrhosis (p=0.48), and tumour size (p=0.15) were not found to be significant. The present study shows that the presence of intra-tumoural fat in small HCCs on pre-procedural MRI can accurately predict their visibility on planning US during percutaneous tumour ablation.

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