Abstract

Purpose: To quantitatively investigate the correlation between liver fat content and hepatic perfusion disorders (HPD) after radiofrequency ablation (RFA) for liver cancer using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-determined proton density fat fraction (PDFF). Materials and methods: A total of 150 liver cancer patients underwent liver MRI examination within one month after RFA and at four months after RFA. According to the liver fat content, they were divided into non-, mild, moderate, and severe fatty liver groups. The liver fat content and hepatic perfusion disorders were determined using PDFF images and dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI images. The relationship between the liver fat content and HPD was investigated. Results: At the first postoperative MRI examination, the proportion of patients in the nonfatty liver group with hyperperfused foci (11.11%) was significantly lower than that in the mild (30.00%), moderate (42.86%), and severe fatty liver (56.67%) groups (p < 0.05), whereas the proportions of patients with hypoperfused foci (6.67%, 7.5%, 5.71%, and 6.67%, respectively) were not significantly different among the four groups (p > 0.05). In the nonfatty liver group, the liver fat content was not correlated with hyperperfusion abnormalities or hypoperfusion abnormalities. By contrast, in the three fatty liver groups, the liver fat content was correlated with hyperperfusion abnormalities but was not correlated with hypoperfusion abnormalities. At the second postoperative MRI examination, six patients in the nonfatty liver group were diagnosed with fatty liver, including two patients with newly developed hyperperfusion abnormalities and one patient whose hypoperfusion abnormality remained the same as it was in the first postoperative MRI examination. Conclusion: There was a high correlation between the liver fat content and hyperperfusion abnormalities after RFA for liver cancer. The higher the liver fat content was, the higher the was risk of hyperperfusion abnormalities. However, there was little correlation between liver fat content and hypoperfusion abnormalities, and the increase in postoperative liver fat content did not induce or alter the presence of hypoperfused foci.

Highlights

  • Hepatic perfusion disorders (HPD) are transient differences in the degree of hepatic enhancement, which are differences in blood perfusion among hepatic segments, subsegments, and lobes caused by various factors [1,2,3]

  • The patients were divided into a nonfatty liver group and a fatty liver group according to the presence or absence of fatty liver in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) examination with proton density fat fraction (PDFF) (IDEAL-IQ sequence, GE Healthcare) before radiofrequency ablation (RFA)

  • There was no difference in liver fat content between all patients before RFA and the first postoperative MRI examination

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Summary

Introduction

Hepatic perfusion disorders (HPD) are transient differences in the degree of hepatic enhancement, which are differences in blood perfusion among hepatic segments, subsegments, and lobes caused by various factors [1,2,3]. The in-depth study of HPD has reported that abnormal liver fat deposition associated with fatty liver, which causes hepatocyte swelling and hepatic sinusoidal compression [4], affects the degree of blood perfusion, which manifests as HPD during contrast-enhanced imaging [5]. Patients who have fatty liver after radiofrequency ablation (RFA) for liver cancer often show abnormal perfusion foci during contrast-enhanced imaging related to the portal vein injury or compression [6]. It is always necessary and an issue to distinguish recurrent tumors from benign transient perfusion anomalies.

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