Abstract

To investigate direct radiation dose-related and inflammation-mediated regional hepatic function losses after stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and poor liver function. Twenty-four patients with HCC enrolled on an IRB-approved adaptive SBRT trial had liver dynamic gadoxetic acid-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging and blood sample collections before and 1 month after SBRT. Gadoxetic acid uptake rate (k1) maps were quantified for regional hepatic function and coregistered to both 2-Gy equivalent dose and physical dose distributions. Regional k1 loss patterns from before to after SBRT were analyzed for effects of dose and patient using a mixed-effects model and logistic function and were associated with pretherapy liver-function albumin-bilirubin scores. Plasma levels of tumor necrosis factor α receptor 1 (TNFR1), an inflammation marker, were correlated with mean k1 losses in the lowest dose regions by Spearman rank correlation. The whole group had a k1 loss rate of 0.4%/Gy (2-Gy equivalent dose); however, there was a significant random effect of patient in the mixed-effect model (P < .05). Patients with poor and good liver functions lost 50% of k1 values at 12.5 and 57.2 Gy and 33% and 16% of k1 values at the lowest dose regions (<5 Gy), respectively. The k1 losses at the lowest dose regions of individual patients were significantly correlated with their TNFR1 levels after SBRT (P < .02). The findings suggest that regional hepatic function losses after SBRT in patients with HCC include both direct radiation dose-dependent and inflammation-mediated effects, which could influence how to manage these patients to preserve their liver function after SBRT.

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