AI Article Synopsis

  • Doctors often see fatty liver (hepatic steatosis) in patients needing surgery for liver cancer spread from the colon.
  • Using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) helps them plan the surgery better, but regular MRIs may not show the full picture of liver health.
  • In a study, two patients had extra detailed MRIs, and the results helped explain why one had complications after surgery while the other did not, suggesting that new MRI techniques could improve how doctors make surgery decisions.

Article Abstract

It is not uncommon for clinicians to encounter varying degrees of hepatic steatosis in patients undergoing resection for colorectal liver metastases (CRLM). Magnetic resonance imaging is currently the preferred investigation for identification and pre-operative planning of these patients. An objective assessment of liver quality and degree of steatosis is paramount for planning a safe resection, which is seldom provided by routine MRI sequences. We studied two patients who underwent an additional pre-operative multiparametric MRI scan (LiverMultiScan) as a part of an observational clinical trial (HepaT1ca, NCT03213314) to assess the quality of liver. Outcome was assessed in the form of post-hepatectomy liver failure. Both patients (Patient 1 and 2) had comparable pre-operative characteristics. Both patients were planned for an extended right hepatectomy with an estimated future liver remnant of approximately 30%. Conventional preoperative contrast MRI showed mild liver steatosis in both patients. Patient one developed post-hepatectomy liver failure leading to prolonged hospital stay compared to patient two who had uneventful post-operative course. Retrospective evaluation of multiparametric MRI scan revealed findings consistent with fibro-inflammatory disease and steatosis (cT1 829 ms, PDFF 14%) for patient 1 whereas patient two had normal parameters (cT1 735 ms, PDFF 2.4%). These findings corresponded with the resection specimen histology. Multiparametric MRI can objectively evaluate future liver health and volume which may help refine surgical decision-making and improve patient outcomes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8171142PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1259/bjrcr.20200172DOI Listing

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