Abstract

The appearance of new-onset liver lesions is frequent during imaging follow-up of oncological patients. Most of these lesions will be metastases. But in the presence of atypical radiological findings, there are other diagnoses to consider. Hepatic abscesses, focal nodular hyperplasia-like in patients treated with platinum salts, or hepatocarcinoma in cirrhotic patients are examples of lesions that may appear in the imaging follow-up and should not be confused with metastases. It is essential to establish the nature of the lesion as this will determine the therapeutic management and might avoid unnecessary invasive procedures. The evaluation of previous radiological studies and the global vision of the patient will be primordial. While liver MRI is mainly the indicated imaging technique for these cases, sometimes a biopsy will be unavoidable. In this article, we will discuss through clinical cases some new-onset liver lesions in oncological patients that generated diagnostic doubts and will explain how to orient the diagnosis.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call