Regression of hepatocellular adenoma after bariatric surgery in severe obese patients.

Liver Int

Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Rijnstate Hospital, Arnhem, The Netherlands.

Published: December 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • Obesity and metabolic syndrome are linked to an increased risk of hepatocellular adenomas (HCA), and this study investigates whether weight loss from bariatric surgery can help reduce HCA in severely obese patients.
  • Data was collected from a patient database, focusing on individuals who had undergone bariatric surgery and had liver benign neoplasms, demonstrating that 3 women with HCA experienced significant regression of the tumors after surgery and weight loss.
  • The findings suggest that weight loss from bariatric surgery can lead to significant improvements in HCA, highlighting the influence of obesity on the development of these liver tumors.

Article Abstract

Background & Aim: Obesity and metabolic syndrome are increasingly recognized as risk factors for hepatocellular adenomas (HCA). There is still sparse evidence whether weight loss or bariatric surgery could induce HCA regression in these patients. In this brief report we describe the effect of weight loss on HCA regression in severe obese patients that had undergone bariatric surgery in our centre.

Methods: We performed an Electronic Patient Database search and included all patients who underwent bariatric surgery in our bariatric referral centre and had an ICD-10 code of benign neoplasm of liver in our centre from (2006-2017). All imaging studies of eligible patients were re-evaluated by the study radiologist. Primary outcome was change in maximal diameter of HCA.

Results: Six of 11 eligible patients were excluded because their lesions were classified as probable focal nodular hyperplasia and two were lost to follow-up. Finally, three women with solitary (n = 1) or multiple HCA (n = 2) and a body mass index (BMI) ranging between 39 and 50 kg/m were included. In two patients, HCA completely regressed in 1-2 years following bariatric surgery, after BMI reductions of 36%-48%. The third patient showed a reduction of >50% in diameter of the largest HCA in 2.5 years after bariatric surgery (31% BMI reduction), with complete resolution of smaller HCA.

Conclusions: Bariatric induced weight loss results in significant regression of HCA in severe obese women, which emphasizes the role of overweight in HCA pathophysiology.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/liv.13934DOI Listing

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