40 results on '"Ronot, M"'
Search Results
2. Prognosefaktoren für das Überleben nach transarterieller Radioembolisation bei Patienten mit intrahepatischem Cholangiokarzinom: Eine kombinierte Analyse der prospektiven CIRT-Studien.
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Reimer, P, Vilgrain, V, Arnold, D, Balli, T, Golfieri, R, Loffroy, R, Mosconi, C, Ronot, M, Sengel, C, Schaefer, N, Maleux, G, Munneke, G, Peynircioglu, B, Sangro, B, Kaufmann, N K, Urdaniz, M, Pereira, H, de Jong, N, and Helmberger, T
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- 2024
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3. Evolution of liver function during immune checkpoint inhibitor treatment for hepatocellular carcinoma.
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Pomej K, Balcar L, Sidali S, Sartoris R, Meischl T, Trauner M, Mandorfer M, Reiberger T, Ronot M, Bouattour M, Pinter M, and Scheiner B
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Background and Aims: Deterioration of liver function is a leading cause of death in patients with advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). We evaluated the impact of immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI)-treatment on liver function and outcomes., Method: HCC patients receiving ICIs or sorafenib between 04/2003 and 05/2024 were included. Liver function (assessed by Child-Pugh score [CPS]) was evaluated at the start of ICI-treatment (baseline, BL) and 3 and 6 months thereafter. A ≥1 point change in CPS was defined as deterioration (-) or improvement (+), while equal CPS points were defined as stable (=)., Results: Overall, 182 ICI-treated patients (66.8 ± 11.8 years; cirrhosis: n = 134, 74%) were included. At BL, median CPS was 5 (IQR: 5-6; CPS-A: 147, 81%). After 3 months, liver function improved/stabilized in 102 (56%) and deteriorated in 61 (34%) patients, while 19 (10%) patients deceased/had missing follow-up (d/noFU). Comparable results were observed at 6 months (+/=: n = 82, 45%; -: n = 55, 30%; d/noFU: n = 45, 25%). In contrast, 54 (34%) and 33 (21%) out of 160 sorafenib patients achieved improvement/stabilization at 3 and 6 months, respectively. Radiological response was linked to CPS improvement/stabilization at 6 months (responders vs. non-responders, 73% vs. 50%; p = 0.007). CPS improvement/stabilization at 6 months was associated with better overall survival following landmark analysis (6 months: +/=: 28.4 [95% CI: 18.7-38.1] versus -: 14.2 [95% CI: 10.3-18.2] months; p < 0.001). Of 35 ICI-patients with CPS-B at BL, improvement/stabilization occurred in 16 (46%) patients, while 19 (54%) patients deteriorated/d/noFU at 3 months. Comparable results were observed at 6 months (CPS +/=: 14, 40%, -: 8, 23%). Importantly, 6/35 (17%) and 9/35 (26%) patients improved from CPS-B to CPS-A at 3 and 6 months., Conclusion: Radiological response to ICI-treatment was associated with stabilization or improvement in liver function, which correlated with improved survival, even in patients with Child-Pugh class B at baseline., (© 2024 The Author(s). United European Gastroenterology Journal published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of United European Gastroenterology.)
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- 2024
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4. Integration of new technologies in the multidisciplinary approach to primary liver tumours: The next-generation tumour board.
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Nault JC, Calderaro J, and Ronot M
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- Humans, Artificial Intelligence trends, Cholangiocarcinoma therapy, Liver Neoplasms therapy, Liver Neoplasms pathology, Patient Care Team trends, Precision Medicine methods, Precision Medicine trends, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular therapy
- Abstract
Primary liver tumours, including benign liver tumours, hepatocellular carcinoma and cholangiocarcinoma, present a multifaceted challenge, necessitating a collaborative approach, as evidenced by the role of the multidisciplinary tumour board (MDTB). The approach to managing primary liver tumours involves specialised teams, including surgeons, radiologists, oncologists, pathologists, hepatologists, and radiation oncologists, coming together to propose individualised treatment plans. The evolving landscape of primary liver cancer treatment introduces complexities, particularly with the expanding array of systemic and locoregional therapies, alongside the potential integration of molecular biology and artificial intelligence (AI) into MDTBs in the future. Precision medicine demands collaboration across disciplines, challenging traditional frameworks. In the next decade, we anticipate the convergence of AI, molecular biology, pathology, and advanced imaging, requiring adaptability in MDTB structure to incorporate these cutting-edge technologies. Navigating this evolution also requires a focus on enhancing basic, translational, and clinical research, as well as boosting clinical trials through an upgraded use of MDTBs as hubs for scientific collaboration and raising literacy about AI and new technologies. In this review, we will delineate the current unmet needs in the clinical management of primary liver cancers, discuss our perspective on the future role of MDTBs in primary liver cancers ("next generation" MDTBs), and unravel the potential power and limitations of novel technologies that may shape the multidisciplinary care landscape for primary liver cancers in the coming decade., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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5. Management of intrahepatic and perihilar cholangiocarcinomas: Guidelines of the French Association for the Study of the Liver (AFEF).
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Neuzillet C, Decraecker M, Larrue H, Ntanda-Nwandji LC, Barbier L, Barge S, Belle A, Chagneau C, Edeline J, Guettier C, Huguet F, Jacques J, Le Bail B, Leblanc S, Lewin M, Malka D, Ronot M, Vendrely V, Vibert É, Bureau C, Bourliere M, Ganne-Carrie N, and Blanc JF
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- Humans, France, Klatskin Tumor therapy, Bile Duct Neoplasms therapy, Cholangiocarcinoma therapy, Bile Ducts, Intrahepatic
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Intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (iCCA) is the second most common malignant primary liver cancer. iCCA may develop on an underlying chronic liver disease and its incidence is growing in relation with the epidemics of obesity and metabolic diseases. In contrast, perihilar cholangiocarcinoma (pCCA) may follow a history of chronic inflammatory diseases of the biliary tract. The initial management of CCAs is often complex and requires multidisciplinary expertise. The French Association for the Study of the Liver wished to organize guidelines in order to summarize the best evidence available about several key points in iCCA and pCCA. These guidelines have been elaborated based on the level of evidence available in the literature and each recommendation has been analysed, discussed and voted by the panel of experts. They describe the epidemiology of CCA as well as how patients with iCCA or pCCA should be managed from diagnosis to treatment. The most recent developments of personalized medicine and use of targeted therapies are also highlighted., (© 2024 The Authors. Liver International published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2024
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6. Is concurrent LR-5 associated with a higher rate of hepatocellular carcinoma in LR-3 or LR-4 observations? An individual participant data meta-analysis.
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Abedrabbo N, Lerner E, Lam E, Kadi D, Dawit H, van der Pol C, Salameh JP, Naringrekar H, Adamo R, Alabousi M, Levis B, Tang A, Alhasan A, Arvind A, Singal A, Allen B, Bartnik K, Podgórska J, Furlan A, Cannella R, Dioguardi Burgio M, Cerny M, Choi SH, Clarke C, Jing X, Kierans A, Ronot M, Rosiak G, Jiang H, Song JS, Reiner CC, Joo I, Kwon H, Wang W, Rao SX, Diaz Telli F, Piñero F, Seo N, Kang HJ, Wang J, Min JH, Costa A, McInnes M, and Bashir M
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Background: The Liver Imaging Reporting and Data System (LI-RADS) does not consider factors extrinsic to the observation of interest, such as concurrent LR-5 observations., Purpose: To evaluate whether the presence of a concurrent LR-5 observation is associated with a difference in the probability that LR-3 or LR-4 observations represent hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) through an individual participant data (IPD) meta-analysis., Methods: Multiple databases were searched from 1/2014 to 2/2023 for studies evaluating the diagnostic accuracy of CT/MRI for HCC using LI-RADS v2014/2017/2018. The search strategy, study selection, and data collection process can be found at https://osf.io/rpg8x . Using a generalized linear mixed model (GLMM), IPD were pooled across studies and modeled simultaneously with a one-stage meta-analysis approach to estimate positive predictive value (PPV) of LR-3 and LR-4 observations without and with concurrent LR-5 for the diagnosis of HCC. Risk of bias was assessed using a composite reference standard and Quality Assessment of Diagnostic Accuracy Studies 2 (QUADAS-2)., Results: Twenty-nine studies comprising 2591 observations in 1456 patients (mean age 59 years, 1083 [74%] male) were included. 587/1960 (29.9%) LR-3 observations in 1009 patients had concurrent LR-5. The PPV for LR-3 observations with concurrent LR-5 was not significantly different from the PPV without LR-5 (45.4% vs 37.1%, p = 0.63). 264/631 (41.8%) LR-4 observations in 447 patients had concurrent LR-5. The PPV for LR-4 observations with concurrent LR-5 was not significantly different from LR-4 observations without concurrent LR-5 (88.6% vs 69.5%, p = 0.08). A sensitivity analysis for low-risk of bias studies (n = 9) did not differ from the primary analysis., Conclusion: The presence of concurrent LR-5 was not significantly associated with differences in PPV for HCC in LR-3 or LR-4 observations, supporting the current LI-RADS paradigm, wherein the presence of synchronous LR-5 may not alter the categorization of LR-3 and LR-4 observations., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2024
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7. Gadobenate dimeglumine-enhanced MRI: A surrogate marker of liver function recovery after auxiliary partial orthotopic liver transplantation.
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Dioguardi Burgio M, Dondero F, Lebtahi R, and Ronot M
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- 2024
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8. Morphometric Analysis of the Superior Mesenteric Artery in Atherothrombotic Mesenteric Ischaemia.
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Corniquet M, Garzelli L, Ronot M, Castier Y, El Batti S, and Ben Abdallah I
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- 2024
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9. Percutaneous recanalization of non-cirrhotic extrahepatic portal vein obstruction in children: technical considerations in a preliminary cohort.
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Marra P, Franchi-Abella S, Hernandez JA, Ronot M, Muglia R, D'Antiga L, and Sironi S
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Objectives: Portal hypertension resulting from non-cirrhotic extrahepatic portal vein obstruction (EHPVO) in children has been primarily managed with the Meso-Rex bypass, but only a few patients have a viable Rex recessus, required by surgery. This study reports a preliminary series of patients who underwent interventional radiology attempts at portal vein recanalization (PVR), with a focus on technical aspects and safety., Methods: A retrospective review of consecutive patients with severe portal hypertension due to non-cirrhotic EHPVO at a single institution from 2022, who underwent percutaneous attempts at PVR, was performed. Technical and clinical data including fluoroscopy time, radiation exposure, technical and clinical success, complications and follow-up were recorded., Results: Eleven patients (6 males and 5 females; median age 7 years, range 1-14) underwent 15 percutaneous transhepatic (n = 1), transplenic (n = 11), or simultaneous transhepatic/transplenic (n = 3) procedures. Rex recessus was patent in 4/11 (36%). Fluoroscopy resulted in a high median total dose area product (DAP) of 123 Gycm
2 (range 17-788 Gycm2 ) per procedure. PVR was achieved in 5/11 patients (45%), 3/5 with obliterated Rex recessus. Two adverse events of grade 2 and grade 3 occurred without sequelae. After angioplasty, 4/5 patients required stenting to obtain sustained patency, as demonstrated by colour-Doppler ultrasound in all PVR after a median follow-up of 6 months (range 6-14)., Conclusion: Our preliminary experience suggests that 45% of children with non-cirrhotic EHPVO can restore portal flow even with obliterated Rex recessus. In non-cirrhotic EHPVO, PVR may be an option, if a Meso-Rex bypass is not feasible, although the radiation exposure deserves attention., Clinical Relevance Statement: Innovative percutaneous procedures may have the potential to be an alternative option to the traditional surgical approach in the management of non-cirrhotic EHPVO and its complications in children not eligible for Meso-Rex bypass surgery., Key Points: Non-cirrhotic portal hypertension in children has been traditionally managed by surgery with Meso-Rex bypass creation. Percutaneous PVR may restore the patency of the native portal system even when the Rex recessus is obliterated and surgery has been excluded. Interventional radiological techniques may offer a minimally invasive solution in complex cases of EHPVO in children when Meso-Rex bypass is not feasible., (© 2024. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2024
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10. MRI-based prediction of the need for wide resection margins in patients with single hepatocellular carcinoma.
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Wang Y, Qu Y, Yang C, Wu Y, Wei H, Qin Y, Yang J, Zheng T, Chen J, Cannella R, Vernuccio F, Ronot M, Chen W, Song B, and Jiang H
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Objectives: To develop an MRI-based score that enables individualized predictions of the survival benefit of wide over narrow resection margins., Materials and Methods: This single-center retrospective study (December 2011 to May 2022) included consecutive patients who underwent curative-intent resection for single Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer (BCLC) 0/A HCC and preoperative contrast-enhanced MRI. In patients with narrow resection margins, preoperative demographic, laboratory, and MRI variables independently associated with early recurrence-free survival (RFS) were identified using Cox regression analyses, which were employed to develop a predictive score (named "MARGIN"). Survival outcomes were compared between wide and narrow resection margins in a propensity-score matched cohort for the score-stratified low- and high-risk groups, respectively., Results: Four hundred nineteen patients (median age, 54 years; 361 men) were included, 282 (67.3%) undergoing narrow resection margins. In patients with narrow resection margins, age, alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) > 400 ng/mL, protein induced by vitamin K absence or antagonist-II (PIVKA-II) > 200 mAU/mL, radiological involvement of liver capsule, and infiltrative appearance were associated with early RFS (p values, 0.002-0.04) and formed the MARGIN score with a testing dataset C-index of 0.75 (95% CI: 0.65-0.84). In the matched cohort, wide resection margin was associated with improved early RFS rate for the high-risk group (MARGIN score ≥ - 1.3; 71.1% vs 41.0%; p = 0.02), but not for the low-risk group (MARGIN score < - 1.3; 79.7% vs 76.1%; p = 0.36)., Conclusion: In patients with single BCLC 0/A HCC, the MARGIN score may serve as promising decision-making to indicate the need for wide resection margins., Clinical Relevance Statement: The MARGIN score has the potential to identify patients who would benefit more from wide resection margins than narrow resection margins, improving the postoperative survival of patients with single BCLC 0/A hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC)., Key Points: Age, AFP, PIVKA-II, radiological involvement of liver capsule, and infiltrative appearance were associated with early RFS and formed the MARGIN score. The MARGIN score achieved a testing dataset C-index of 0.75. Wide resection margins were associated with improved early RFS for the high-risk group, but not for the low-risk group., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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11. Refining Diagnostic Accuracy for Bowel Necrosis in Closed-Loop Small Bowel Obstruction.
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Dana J, Gauvin S, Ronot M, and Grégory J
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- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Aged, Adult, Retrospective Studies, Aged, 80 and over, Intestinal Obstruction diagnostic imaging, Necrosis diagnostic imaging, Intestine, Small diagnostic imaging, Intestine, Small pathology, Tomography, X-Ray Computed methods
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- 2024
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12. Clinical management of liver cyst infections: an international, modified Delphi-based clinical decision framework.
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Duijzer R, Bernts LHP, Geerts A, van Hoek B, Coenraad MJ, Rovers C, Alvaro D, Kuijper EJ, Nevens F, Halbritter J, Colmenero J, Kupcinskas J, Salih M, Hogan MC, Ronot M, Vilgrain V, Hanemaaijer NM, Kamath PS, Strnad P, Taubert R, Gansevoort RT, Torra R, Nadalin S, Suwabe T, Gevers TJG, Cardinale V, Drenth JPH, and Lantinga MA
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- Humans, Delphi Technique, Liver Diseases therapy, Liver Diseases diagnosis, Cysts therapy, Cysts diagnosis, Clinical Decision-Making, Consensus
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Liver cyst infections often necessitate long-term hospital admission and are associated with considerable morbidity and mortality. We conducted a modified Delphi study to reach expert consensus for a clinical decision framework. The expert panel consisted of 24 medical specialists, including 12 hepatologists, from nine countries across Europe, North America, and Asia. The Delphi had three rounds. The first round (response rate 21/24 [88%]) was an online survey with questions constructed from literature review and expert opinion, in which experts were asked about their management preferences and rated possible management strategies for seven clinical scenarios. Experts also rated 14 clinical decision-making items for relevancy and defined treatment outcomes. During the second round (response rate 13/24 [54%]), items that did not reach consensus and newly suggested themes were discussed in an online panel meeting. In the third round (response rate 16/24 [67%]), experts voted on definitions and management strategies using an online survey based on previous answers. Consensus was predefined as a vote threshold of at least 75%. We identified five subclassifications of liver cyst infection according to cyst phenotypes and patient immune status and consensus on episode definitions (new, persistent, and recurrent) and criteria for treatment success or failure was reached. The experts agreed that fever and elevated C-reactive protein are pivotal decision-making items for initiating and evaluating the management of liver cyst infections. Consensus was reached on 26 management statements for patients with liver cyst infections across multiple clinical scenarios, including two treatment algorithms, which were merged into one after comments. We provide a clinical decision framework for physicians managing patients with liver cyst infections. This framework will facilitate uniformity in the management of liver cyst infections and can constitute the basis for the development of future guidelines., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests JH has received a grant from Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft—German Research Foundation. JC has received support from Secretaria d'Universitats i Recerca del Departament d'Economia i Coneixement (Agency for Management of University and Research Grants 2021; SGR 01331), Instituto Carlos III (PI22/01234) co-funded by the EU; a research grant by Asociación Española Estudio del Hígado (2022–23); and consulting fees, honoraria, and support for travel or attending meetings from Astellas, Chiesi, and Novartis. MS has received a grant from the Dutch Kidney Foundation (19OK002 and 23OK1044). MCH received a research grant from Camarus Pharmaceuticals. Hôpital Beaujon, Clichy, France, received, on behalf of MR, consulting fees from Quantum Surgical. MR has received honoraria from Guerbet, Angiodynamics, AstraZeneca, General Electric, Terumo, and Servier. VV has received consulting fees from Guerbet; honoraria from Canon Medical, GE Healthcare, Roche, and Sirtex; payment for expert testimony from Bayer, Guerbet, Sirtex, Boston Scientific, and Quantum Surgical; support for attending meetings or travel from Canon Medical, GE Healthcare, Roche, and Sirtex; and is Scientific Director of European School of Radiology without financial compensation. PS has received grants from Arrowhead, Grifols, CSL Behring, Vertex, and Dicerna; consulting fees from Biomarin, Intellia, Dicerna, NovoNordisk, GSK, Ono, and Takeda; honoraria from Advanz, Sanofi, CSL Behring, Grifols, and Sobi; support for attending meetings or travel from CSL Behring, Takeda, and Biogen; participates on data and safety monitoring boards for Albireo, Dicerna, Takeda, Biomarin, Intellia, and Sobi; has a leadership role in Alpha1 Global and Alpha1-Deutschland; and received materials from Takeda. RTa received grants from Chronix Biomedical/Oncocyte; consulting fees from MSD (2022), Tiefenbacher AEG (2022), Chiesi (2023), Pierre Fabre (2023), and Chronix Biomedical/Oncocyte (2023); speaker fees from Orphalan, Biotest, Alexion, and Chiesi; is co-inventor of a patent of Hannover Medical School, Hanover, Germany (autoantibodies tests against HIP1R to diagnose autoimmunhepatitis in adults and children; European patent number 18789434.0); and has received provision of consumables from Innova and Euroimmun. RTo is President-elect of European Renal Association. TJGG received grants from the Dutch Digestive Foundation and Gilead for the development of mylivercoach and received travel support from AbbVie to attend International Liver Congress 2022. VC received honoraria from Ipseon and Albireo. On behalf of JPHD, Radboudumc received a research grant from AbbVie. JPHD acts as a board member of the European Reference Network RARE-Liver and principal investigator of the POSITANO study by Camarus. MAL received grants from the Dutch Digestive Foundation, Vaillant fonds, and NVGE Gastrostart. All other authors declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved, including those for text and data mining, AI training, and similar technologies.)
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- 2024
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13. Improving HCC surveillance with abbreviated MRI: A call to integrate and innovate?
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Ronot M
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- Humans, Liver Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular diagnostic imaging, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular diagnosis, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods
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- 2024
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14. Portal vein thrombosis: diagnosis, management, and endpoints for future clinical studies.
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Elkrief L, Hernandez-Gea V, Senzolo M, Albillos A, Baiges A, Berzigotti A, Bureau C, Murad SD, De Gottardi A, Durand F, Garcia-Pagan JC, Lisman T, Mandorfer M, McLin V, Moga L, Nery F, Northup P, Nuzzo A, Paradis V, Patch D, Payancé A, Plaforet V, Plessier A, Poisson J, Roberts L, Salem R, Sarin S, Shukla A, Toso C, Tripathi D, Valla D, Ronot M, and Rautou PE
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- Humans, Hypertension, Portal diagnosis, Hypertension, Portal therapy, Hypertension, Portal etiology, Hypertension, Portal complications, Risk Factors, Anticoagulants therapeutic use, Liver Cirrhosis complications, Liver Cirrhosis diagnosis, Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage etiology, Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage therapy, Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage diagnosis, Pregnancy, Female, Quality of Life, Portal Vein, Venous Thrombosis diagnosis, Venous Thrombosis therapy
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Portal vein thrombosis (PVT) refers to the development of a non-malignant obstruction of the portal vein, its branches, its radicles, or a combination. This Review first provides a comprehensive overview of all aspects of PVT, namely the specifics of the portal venous system, the risk factors for PVT, the pathophysiology of portal hypertension in PVT, the interest in non-invasive tests, as well as therapeutic approaches including the effect of treating risk factors for PVT or cause of cirrhosis, anticoagulation, portal vein recanalisation by interventional radiology, and prevention and management of variceal bleeding in patients with PVT. Specific issues are also addressed including portal cholangiopathy, mesenteric ischaemia and intestinal necrosis, quality of life, fertility, contraception and pregnancy, and PVT in children. This Review will then present endpoints for future clinical studies in PVT, both in patients with and without cirrhosis, agreed by a large panel of experts through a Delphi consensus process. These endpoints include classification of portal vein thrombus extension, classification of PVT evolution, timing of assessment of PVT, and global endpoints for studies on PVT including clinical outcomes. These endpoints will help homogenise studies on PVT and thus facilitate reporting, comparison between studies, and validation of future studies and trials on PVT., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests VHG has received speaker fees from Gore Medical and Cook Medical. ADG has received consulting fees from Astrazeneca and Swedish Orphan Biovitrum. MR serves as consultant from Quantum Surgical (fees paid to institution) and has received speaker fees from Servier, Guerbet, GE Healthcare, Ipsen, Angiodynamics, and AstraZeneca. FN has received speaker fees from Advanz and Permanyer. VML serves as consultant from AstraZaneca and has received speaker fees and travel support from Albireo Ipsen. AB serves as consultant for Boehringer Ingelheim and has received speaker fees from GE Healthcare and Hologic. AA has served as a lecturer for Boehringer-Ingelheim and Gore Medical. AN has received research funding from MSD-Avenir and consulting fees from Abbvie and Janssen. MM serves as a lecturer for AbbVie, Ipsen, Echosens, Gilead Sciences, and Gore Medical, and has received travel support from AbbVie and Gilead Sciences. DP has served as lecturer for Boehringer-Ingelheim and Gore Medical. DT has received research grants from Boehringer-Ingelheim and Novartis and has served as lecturer for Gore Medical. JCGP has received speaker fees from Gore Medical and research grants from Mallinkrodt and AstraZeneca. All other authors declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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15. Hepatic compartment syndrome, a rare complication after any liver insult or liver transplantation: Three case reports and literature review.
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Nassar A, Braquet T, Aussilhou B, Ronot M, Weiss E, Dondéro F, Lesurtel M, and Dokmak S
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Hepatic compartment syndrome (HCS) is a rare but life-threatening entity that consists of a decreased portal flow due to intraparenchymal hypertension secondary to subcapsular liver hematoma. Lethal liver failure can be observed. We report three cases, and review the literature. A 54-year-old male was admitted for extensive hepatic subcapsular hematoma after blunt abdominal trauma. Initially, he underwent embolization of the hepatic artery's right branch, after which he presented clinical deterioration, major cytolysis (310 times the upper limit of normal [ULN]), and liver failure with a prothrombin time (PT) at 31.0%. A 56-year-old male underwent liver transplantation for acute alcoholic hepatitis. On postoperative day 2, he presented a hemorrhagic shock associated with deterioration of liver function (cytolysis 21 ULN, PT 39.0%) due to extensive hepatic subcapsular hematoma. A 59-year-old male presented a hepatic subcapsular hematoma five days after a cholecystectomy, revealed by abdominal pain with liver dysfunction (cytolysis 10 ULN, PT 63.0%). All patients ultimately underwent urgent surgery for liver capsule excision, hematoma evacuation, and liver packing, if needed. The international literature was screened for this entity. These three patients' outcomes were favorable, and all were alive at postoperative day 90. The literature review found 15 reported cases. HCS can occur after any direct or indirect liver trauma. Surgical decompression is the main treatment, and there is probably no place for arterial embolization, which may increase the risk of liver necrosis. A 13.3% mortality rate is reported. HCS is a rare complication of subcapsular liver hematoma that compresses the liver parenchyma, and leads to liver failure. Urgent surgical decompression is needed.
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- 2024
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16. Discontinuous peripheral enhancement of focal liver lesions on CT and MRI: outside the box of typical cavernous hemangioma.
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Matteini F, Cannella R, Dioguardi Burgio M, Torrisi C, Sartoris R, Brancatelli G, Vilgrain V, Ronot M, and Vernuccio F
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The discontinuous peripheral enhancement is a pattern of enhancement usually attributed to typical cavernous hemangioma, that is the most common benign solid lesion of the liver. The discontinuous peripheral enhancement, however, may be encountered in many other benign and malignant focal liver lesions as an atypical presentation or evolution, and hemangiomas with discontinuous peripheral hyperenhancement on hepatic arterial phase may not always have the typical post-contrast pattern on portal venous and delayed phases. Therefore, abdominal radiologists may be challenged in their practice by lesions with discontinuous peripheral enhancement. This pictorial essay aims to review the spectrum of benign and malignant focal liver lesions that may show discontinuous peripheral enhancement. A particular point of interest is the diagnostic tree pathway that may guide the radiologists in the differential diagnosis., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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17. Imaging-based assessment of sarcopenia in patients with compensated advanced chronic liver disease: One step further.
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Ronot M
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- Humans, Liver Diseases complications, Liver Diseases diagnostic imaging, Chronic Disease, Sarcopenia diagnostic imaging, Sarcopenia complications, Sarcopenia diagnosis
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Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest Maxime Ronot received speaker fees from Sirtex, Guerbet, Ipsen, Servier, GE Healthcare, Angiodynamics, AstraZeneca, and consulting fees (paid to the institution) from Quantum Surgical.
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- 2024
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18. Automated MRI liver segmentation for anatomical segmentation, liver volumetry, and the extraction of radiomics.
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Gross M, Huber S, Arora S, Ze'evi T, Haider SP, Kucukkaya AS, Iseke S, Kuhn TN, Gebauer B, Michallek F, Dewey M, Vilgrain V, Sartoris R, Ronot M, Jaffe A, Strazzabosco M, Chapiro J, and Onofrey JA
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- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Adult, Neural Networks, Computer, Liver diagnostic imaging, Contrast Media, Aged, Radiomics, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Liver Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Objectives: To develop and evaluate a deep convolutional neural network (DCNN) for automated liver segmentation, volumetry, and radiomic feature extraction on contrast-enhanced portal venous phase magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)., Materials and Methods: This retrospective study included hepatocellular carcinoma patients from an institutional database with portal venous MRI. After manual segmentation, the data was randomly split into independent training, validation, and internal testing sets. From a collaborating institution, de-identified scans were used for external testing. The public LiverHccSeg dataset was used for further external validation. A 3D DCNN was trained to automatically segment the liver. Segmentation accuracy was quantified by the Dice similarity coefficient (DSC) with respect to manual segmentation. A Mann-Whitney U test was used to compare the internal and external test sets. Agreement of volumetry and radiomic features was assessed using the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC)., Results: In total, 470 patients met the inclusion criteria (63.9±8.2 years; 376 males) and 20 patients were used for external validation (41±12 years; 13 males). DSC segmentation accuracy of the DCNN was similarly high between the internal (0.97±0.01) and external (0.96±0.03) test sets (p=0.28) and demonstrated robust segmentation performance on public testing (0.93±0.03). Agreement of liver volumetry was satisfactory in the internal (ICC, 0.99), external (ICC, 0.97), and public (ICC, 0.85) test sets. Radiomic features demonstrated excellent agreement in the internal (mean ICC, 0.98±0.04), external (mean ICC, 0.94±0.10), and public (mean ICC, 0.91±0.09) datasets., Conclusion: Automated liver segmentation yields robust and generalizable segmentation performance on MRI data and can be used for volumetry and radiomic feature extraction., Clinical Relevance Statement: Liver volumetry, anatomic localization, and extraction of quantitative imaging biomarkers require accurate segmentation, but manual segmentation is time-consuming. A deep convolutional neural network demonstrates fast and accurate segmentation performance on T1-weighted portal venous MRI., Key Points: • This deep convolutional neural network yields robust and generalizable liver segmentation performance on internal, external, and public testing data. • Automated liver volumetry demonstrated excellent agreement with manual volumetry. • Automated liver segmentations can be used for robust and reproducible radiomic feature extraction., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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19. Benign and malignant focal liver lesions displaying rim arterial phase hyperenhancement on CT and MRI.
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Matteini F, Cannella R, Garzelli L, Dioguardi Burgio M, Sartoris R, Brancatelli G, Vilgrain V, Ronot M, and Vernuccio F
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Rim arterial phase hyperenhancement is an imaging feature commonly encountered on contrast-enhanced CT and MRI in focal liver lesions. Rim arterial phase hyperenhancement is a subtype of arterial phase hyperenhancement mainly present at the periphery of lesions on the arterial phase. It is caused by a relative arterialization of the periphery compared with the center of the lesion and needs to be differentiated from other patterns of peripheral enhancement, including the peripheral discontinuous nodular enhancement and the corona enhancement. Rim arterial phase hyperenhancement may be a typical or an atypical imaging presentation of many benign and malignant focal liver lesions, challenging the radiologists during imaging interpretation. Benign focal liver lesions that may show rim arterial phase hyperenhancement may have a vascular, infectious, or inflammatory origin. Malignant focal liver lesions displaying rim arterial phase hyperenhancement may have a vascular, hepatocellular, biliary, lymphoid, or secondary origin. The differences in imaging characteristics on contrast-enhanced CT may be subtle, and a multiparametric approach on MRI may be helpful to narrow the list of differentials. This article aims to review the broad spectrum of focal liver lesions that may show rim arterial phase hyperenhancement, using an approach based on the benign and malignant nature of lesions and their histologic origin. CRITICAL RELEVANCE STATEMENT: Rim arterial phase hyperenhancement may be an imaging feature encountered in benign and malignant focal liver lesions and the diagnostic algorithm approach provided in this educational review may guide toward the final diagnosis. KEY POINTS: Several focal liver lesions may demonstrate rim arterial phase hyperenhancement. Rim arterial phase hyperenhancement may occur in vascular, inflammatory, and neoplastic lesions. Rim arterial phase hyperenhancement may challenge radiologists during image interpretation., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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20. Illuminating the shades of hyper- to isointense lesions in hepatobiliary phase imaging.
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Ronot M
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- 2024
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21. Performance of spleen stiffness measurement to rule out high-risk varices in patients with porto-sinusoidal vascular disorder.
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Moga L, Paradis V, Ferreira-Silva J, Gudavalli K, Indulti F, Dajti E, Nicoara-Farcau O, Tosetti G, Antonenko A, Fodor A, Vidal-González J, Turco L, Capinha F, Elkrief L, Monllor-Nunell T, Goria O, Balcar L, Lannes A, Mallet V, Poujol-Robert A, Thabut D, Houssel-Debry P, Wong YJ, Ronot M, Vilgrain V, Rampally SP, Payancé A, Castera L, Reiberger T, Ferrusquía-Acosta J, Noronha Ferreira C, Vitale G, Simon-Talero M, Procopet B, Berzigotti A, Caccia R, Turon F, Schepis F, Ravaioli F, Colecchia A, Valsan A, Macedo G, Plessier A, and Rautou PE
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Background and Aims: Baveno VII consensus suggests that screening endoscopy can be spared in patients with compensated cirrhosis when spleen stiffness measurement (SSM) by vibration-controlled transient elastography (VCTE) is ≤40 kPa as they have a low probability of high-risk varices (HRV). Conversely, screening endoscopy is required in all patients with porto-sinusoidal vascular disorder (PSVD). This study aimed to evaluate the performance of SSM-VCTE to rule out HRV in patients with PSVD and signs of portal hypertension., Approach and Results: We retrospectively included patients with PSVD, ≥1 sign of portal hypertension, without a history of variceal bleeding, who underwent an SSM-VCTE within 2 years before or after an upper endoscopy in 21 VALDIG centers, divided into a derivation and a validation cohort. One hundred fifty-four patients were included in the derivation cohort; 43% had HRV. By multivariable logistic regression analysis, SSM-VCTE >40 kPa and serum bilirubin ≥1 mg/dL were associated with HRV. SSM-VCTE ≤40 kPa combined with bilirubin <1 mg/dL had a sensitivity of 96% to rule out HRV and could spare 38% of screening endoscopies, with 4% of HRV missed, and a 95% negative predictive value. In the validation cohort, including 155 patients, SSM combined with bilirubin could spare 21% of screening endoscopies, with 4% of HRV missed and a 94% negative predictive value., Conclusions: This study gathering a total of 309 patients with PSVD showed that SSM-VCTE ≤40 kPa combined with bilirubin <1 mg/dL identifies patients with PSVD and portal hypertension with a probability of HRV <5%, in whom screening endoscopy can be spared., (Copyright © 2024 American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.)
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- 2024
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22. Adding Short to Left Gastric Artery Embolization for the Treatment of Obesity: Safety and Effectiveness.
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di Giuseppe R, Hansel B, Puyraimond Zemmour J, Vilgrain V, Ronot M, and Garzelli L
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- Humans, Female, Retrospective Studies, Male, Middle Aged, Adult, Aged, Treatment Outcome, Microspheres, Embolization, Therapeutic methods, Gastric Artery, Obesity therapy, Obesity complications, Weight Loss
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Purpose: This study assessed the safety and effectiveness of a technical modification that involves adding short gastric artery (SGA) embolization to left gastric artery (LGA) embolization., Material and Methods: This retrospective single-center study analyzed twenty obese patients (median age of 53.5 (30-73)) who were not eligible for bariatric surgery and underwent bariatric embolization with 300-500-µm microspheres in addition to a lifestyle counseling program between March 2021 and July 2022. Eight patients had LGA + SGA embolization, and twelve had LGA embolization alone. The primary outcome measure was total body weight loss (TBWL) at 6 months in the SGA + LGA and the LGA-only cohorts. Safety was assessed, defined as the 30-day adverse events rate according to the SIR classification., Results: The mean 6-month post-embolization TBWL in the SGA + LGA cohort was 7.3 kg (95%CI 2.1-12.4; p = .01) and 4.1 kg (95%CI 0.4-8.6; p = 0.034) in the LGA-only cohort (mean difference - 3.1 kg ± 2.8; 95%CI (- 9.1-2.8); p = .28). The mean 6-month post-embolization TBWL in the entire cohort was 5.3 kg (p < .01). The rate of complications was similar between the two groups., Conclusion: Combined SGA and LGA embolization is safe and effective to treat obesity. Larger studies are needed to determine whether SGA + LGA embolization results in more significant weight loss than LGA embolization alone., (© 2024. Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature and the Cardiovascular and Interventional Radiological Society of Europe (CIRSE).)
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- 2024
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23. Reappraising imaging features of pancreatic acinar cystic transformation: be aware of differential diagnoses.
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Aguilera Munoz L, Boros C, Bonvalet F, de Mestier L, Maire F, Lévy P, Cros J, Ronot M, and Rebours V
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Objectives: Imaging features of pancreatic acinar cystic transformation (ACT) have been published. We aimed to describe the clinical and radiological characteristics of patients with a presumed pancreatic ACT diagnosis, reappraising the value of these published imaging criteria., Materials and Methods: Single-center retrospective study (2003-2021) of consecutive patients with a presumed diagnosis of ACT as suggested by the local expert multidisciplinary case review board. Patients without available imaging (CT or MRI) for review were excluded. Patients were classified into "certain" ACT (if ≥ 2 imaging criteria and no differential diagnosis) or "uncertain" ACT (if ≥ 1 imaging criteria and suggested differential diagnoses)., Results: Sixty-four patients (35 males, [55%]) were included. ACT was considered "certain" for 34 patients (53%) and "uncertain" for 30 patients (47%). The number of ACT criteria did not differ between groups, with 91.2% of patients with ≥ 3 ACT imaging criteria in the "certain" group vs 93.3% in the "uncertain" group (p = 0.88). In the "uncertain" group, the main suggested differentials were branch-duct intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm (18/30 patients, 60%), calcifying chronic pancreatitis (8/30 patients, 27%), both (three patients, 10%) and serous cystadenoma (one patient, 3%). Calcifications were significantly more frequent in the "uncertain" group (89% vs 63% in the "certain" group, p = 0.02)., Conclusion: Published ACT imaging criteria are frequently associated with features suggesting differential diagnoses. They appear insufficient to reach a final diagnosis in a subset of patients., Clinical Relevance Statement: ACT displays a heterogeneous morphological imaging presentation challenging the non-invasive diagnostic work-up. Physicians' and radiologists' awareness of this entity is important to better understand its natural history and improve non-invasive diagnostic criteria., Key Points: The criteria to help diagnose ACT are frequently associated with features suggestive of differentials. The main alternatives suggested when ACT diagnosis was "uncertain" were branch-duct intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm and calcifying chronic pancreatitis. Published ACT diagnostic imaging criteria can be insufficient for a definite non-invasive diagnosis., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to European Society of Radiology.)
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- 2024
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24. Predictors of Survival Without Intestinal Resection after First-Line Endovascular Revascularization in Patients with Acute Arterial Mesenteric Ischemia.
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Garzelli L, Dufay R, Tual A, Corcos O, Cazals-Hatem D, Vilgrain V, Nuzzo A, Ben Abdallah I, and Ronot M
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- Humans, Male, Female, Retrospective Studies, Middle Aged, Aged, Intestines blood supply, Intestines diagnostic imaging, Intestines surgery, Acute Disease, Mesenteric Ischemia surgery, Mesenteric Ischemia diagnostic imaging, Mesenteric Ischemia mortality, Endovascular Procedures methods
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Background Acute arterial mesenteric ischemia requires emergency treatment and is associated with high mortality rate and poor quality of life. Identifying factors associated with survival without intestinal resection (hereafter, intestinal resection-free [IRF] survival) could help in treatment decision-making after first-line endovascular revascularization. Purpose To identify factors associated with 30-day IRF survival in patients with acute arterial mesenteric ischemia whose first-line treatment was endovascular revascularization. Materials and Methods Patients with acute arterial mesenteric ischemia whose first-line treatment was endovascular revascularization because of a low probability of bowel necrosis were included in this single-center retrospective cohort (May 2014 to August 2022). Patient demographics, laboratory values, clinical characteristics at admission, CT scans, angiograms, and endovascular revascularization-related variables were included. The primary end point was 30-day IRF survival, and secondary end points were 3-month, 1-year, and 3-year overall survival. Factors independently associated with 30-day IRF survival were identified with binary logistic regression. Results A total of 117 patients (median age, 70 years [IQR, 60-77]; 53 female, 64 male) were included. Within 30 days after revascularization, 73 of 117 patients (62%) survived without resection, 28 of 117 (24%) survived after resection, 14 of 117 (12%) died without resection, and two of 117 (2%) underwent resection but died. The 30-day IRF survival was 63% (74 of 117). The 3-month, 1-year, and 3-year mortality rate was 18% (21 of 117), 21% (25 of 117), and 27% (32 of 117), respectively. Independent predictors of 30-day IRF survival were persistent bowel enhancement at initial CT (odds ratio [OR], 0.3; 95% CI: 0.2, 0.8; P = .013) and C-reactive protein (CRP) level less than 100 mg/L (OR, 0.3; 95% CI: 0.1, 0.8; P = .002). The 30-day IRF survival was 86%, 61%, 47%, and 23% in patients with both favorable features, persistent bowel enhancement but CRP level greater than 100 mg/L, no bowel enhancement but CRP level less than 100 mg/L, and both unfavorable features, respectively. Conclusion Independent predictors associated with 30-day IRF survival in patients with acute arterial mesenteric ischemia whose first-line treatment was endovascular revascularization were persistent bowel wall enhancement at initial CT and CRP level less than 100 mg/L. © RSNA, 2024 Supplemental material is available for this article.
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- 2024
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25. Covered versus bare-metal stenting in chronic mesenteric ischaemia.
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Garzelli L, Ben Abdallah I, and Ronot M
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- Humans, Chronic Disease, Treatment Outcome, Mesenteric Ischemia surgery, Mesenteric Ischemia therapy, Stents adverse effects
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Competing Interests: MR received a consulting fee from Quantum Surgical to their institution; has received a speaker fee from General Electric, Terumo, Guerbet, Servier, Angiodynamics, and AstraZeneca. All other authors declare no competing interests.
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- 2024
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26. Prognostic MRI features to predict postresection survivals for very early to intermediate stage hepatocellular carcinoma.
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Jiang H, Qin Y, Wei H, Zheng T, Yang T, Wu Y, Ding C, Chernyak V, Ronot M, Fowler KJ, Chen W, Bashir MR, and Song B
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- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Prognosis, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local diagnostic imaging, Contrast Media, Adult, Aged, Neoplasm Staging, Liver Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Liver Neoplasms surgery, Liver Neoplasms mortality, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular diagnostic imaging, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular surgery, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular mortality, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Hepatectomy
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Objectives: Contrast-enhanced MRI can provide individualized prognostic information for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). We aimed to investigate the value of MRI features to predict early (≤ 2 years)/late (> 2 years) recurrence-free survival (E-RFS and L-RFS, respectively) and overall survival (OS)., Materials and Methods: Consecutive adult patients at a tertiary academic center who received curative-intent liver resection for very early to intermediate stage HCC and underwent preoperative contrast-enhanced MRI were retrospectively enrolled from March 2011 to April 2021. Three masked radiologists independently assessed 54 MRI features. Uni- and multivariable Cox regression analyses were conducted to investigate the associations of imaging features with E-RFS, L-RFS, and OS., Results: This study included 600 patients (median age, 53 years; 526 men). During a median follow-up of 55.3 months, 51% of patients experienced recurrence (early recurrence: 66%; late recurrence: 34%), and 17% died. Tumor size, multiple tumors, rim arterial phase hyperenhancement, iron sparing in solid mass, tumor growth pattern, and gastroesophageal varices were associated with E-RFS and OS (largest p = .02). Nonperipheral washout (p = .006), markedly low apparent diffusion coefficient value (p = .02), intratumoral arteries (p = .01), and width of the main portal vein (p = .03) were associated with E-RFS but not with L-RFS or OS, while the VICT2 trait was specifically associated with OS (p = .02). Multiple tumors (p = .048) and radiologically-evident cirrhosis (p < .001) were the only predictors for L-RFS., Conclusion: Twelve visually-assessed MRI features predicted postoperative E-RFS (≤ 2 years), L-RFS (> 2 years), and OS for very early to intermediate-stage HCCs., Clinical Relevance Statement: The prognostic MRI features may help inform personalized surgical planning, neoadjuvant/adjuvant therapies, and postoperative surveillance, thus may be included in future prognostic models., Key Points: • Tumor size, multiple tumors, rim arterial phase hyperenhancement, iron sparing, tumor growth pattern, and gastroesophageal varices predicted both recurrence-free survival within 2 years and overall survival. • Nonperipheral washout, markedly low apparent diffusion coefficient value, intratumoral arteries, and width of the main portal vein specifically predicted recurrence-free survival within 2 years, while the VICT2 trait specifically predicted overall survival. • Multiple tumors and radiologically-evident cirrhosis were the only predictors for recurrence-free survival beyond 2 years., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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27. Prospective Comparison of Attenuation Imaging and Controlled Attenuation Parameter for Liver Steatosis Diagnosis in Patients With Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease and Type 2 Diabetes.
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Dioguardi Burgio M, Castera L, Oufighou M, Rautou PE, Paradis V, Bedossa P, Sartoris R, Ronot M, Bodard S, Garteiser P, Van Beers B, Valla D, Vilgrain V, and Correas JM
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- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Aged, Adult, Ultrasonography methods, Biopsy, Histocytochemistry methods, Liver pathology, Liver diagnostic imaging, Fatty Liver diagnostic imaging, Fatty Liver pathology, Fatty Liver diagnosis, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 complications, Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease diagnostic imaging, Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease complications, Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease pathology, Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease diagnosis, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods
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Background & Aims: Similarly to the controlled attenuation parameter (CAP), the ultrasound-based attenuation imaging (ATI) can quantify hepatic steatosis. We prospectively compared the performance of ATI and CAP for the diagnosis of hepatic steatosis in patients with type 2 diabetes and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease using histology and magnetic resonance imaging-proton density fat fraction (MRI-PDFF) as references., Methods: Patients underwent ATI and CAP measurement, MRI, and biopsy on the same day. Steatosis was classified as S0, S1, S2, and S3 on histology (<5%, 5%-33%, 33%-66%, and >66%, respectively) while the thresholds of 6.4%, 17.4%, and 22.1%, respectively, were used for MRI-PDFF. The area under the curve (AUC) of ATI and CAP was compared using a DeLong test., Results: Steatosis could be evaluated in 191 and 187 patients with MRI-PDFF and liver biopsy, respectively. For MRI-PDFF steatosis, the AUC of ATI and CAP were 0.86 (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.81-0.91) vs 0.69 (95% CI, 0.62-0.75) for S0 vs S1-S3 (P = .02) and 0.71 (95% CI, 0.64-0.77) vs 0.69 (95% CI, 0.61-0.75) for S0-S1 vs S2-S3 (P = .60), respectively. For histological steatosis, the AUC of ATI and CAP were 0.92 (95% CI, 0.87-0.95) vs 0.95 (95% CI, 0.91-0.98) for S0 vs S1-S3 (P = .64) and 0.79 (95% CI, 0.72-0.84) vs 0.76 (95% CI, 0.69-0.82) for S0-S1 vs S2-S3 (P = .61), respectively., Conclusion: ATI may be used as an alternative to CAP for the diagnosis and quantification of steatosis, in patients with type 2 diabetes and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease., (Copyright © 2024 AGA Institute. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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28. Biliary tract cancers: French national clinical practice guidelines for diagnosis, treatments and follow-up (TNCD, SNFGE, FFCD, UNICANCER, GERCOR, SFCD, SFED, AFEF, SFRO, SFP, SFR, ACABi, ACHBPT).
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Roth GS, Verlingue L, Sarabi M, Blanc JF, Boleslawski E, Boudjema K, Bretagne-Bignon AL, Camus-Duboc M, Coriat R, Créhange G, De Baere T, de la Fouchardière C, Dromain C, Edeline J, Gelli M, Guiu B, Horn S, Laurent-Croise V, Lepage C, Lièvre A, Lopez A, Manfredi S, Meilleroux J, Neuzillet C, Paradis V, Prat F, Ronot M, Rosmorduc O, Cunha AS, Soubrane O, Turpin A, Louvet C, Bouché O, and Malka D
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- Humans, Follow-Up Studies, Bile Ducts, Intrahepatic, Biliary Tract Neoplasms diagnosis, Biliary Tract Neoplasms genetics, Biliary Tract Neoplasms therapy, Bile Duct Neoplasms diagnosis, Bile Duct Neoplasms genetics, Bile Duct Neoplasms therapy, Endopeptidases
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Introduction: This document is a summary of the French intergroup guidelines of the management of biliary tract cancers (BTC) (intrahepatic, perihilar and distal cholangiocarcinomas, and gallbladder carcinomas) published in September 2023, available on the website of the French Society of Gastroenterology (SNFGE) (www.tncd.org)., Methods: This collaborative work was conducted under the auspices of French medical and surgical societies involved in the management of BTC. Recommendations were graded in three categories (A, B and C) according to the level of scientific evidence until August 2023., Results: BTC diagnosis and staging is mainly based on enhanced computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging and (endoscopic) ultrasound-guided biopsy. Treatment strategy depends on BTC subtype and disease stage. Surgery followed by adjuvant capecitabine is recommended for localised disease. No neoadjuvant treatment is validated to date. Cisplatin-gemcitabine chemotherapy combined to the anti-PD-L1 inhibitor durvalumab is the first-line standard of care for advanced disease. Early systematic tumour molecular profiling is recommended to screen for actionable alterations (IDH1 mutations, FGFR2 rearrangements, HER2 amplification, BRAF
V600E mutation, MSI/dMMR status, etc.) and guide subsequent lines of treatment. In the absence of actionable alterations, FOLFOX chemotherapy is the only second-line standard-of-care. No third-line chemotherapy standard is validated to date., Conclusion: These guidelines are intended to provide a personalised therapeutic strategy for daily clinical practice. Each individual BTC case should be discussed by a multidisciplinary team., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests: Gael Roth declares consulting or advisory role or invitation as a speaker for Servier, AstraZeneca, Bristol-Myers Squibb, MSD, Amgen, Ipsen, Accord Healthcare, Pierre Fabre, Incyte, Netris Pharma and Alpha Tau, as well as travel accommodations, or expenses from Servier, AstraZeneca, Bristol Myers Squibb, MSD, Roche, Amgen, Viatris, Pierre Fabre and Ipsen. Research funding by Genoscience Pharma, Netris Pharma. Matthieu Sarabi declares consultancy/honoraria AstraZeneca, Servier, Roche and accommodations or expenses from Ipsen. Jean-Frédéric Blanc declares honoraria from incyte, servier, AZ, Roche, Tahio oncology, MSD. Anne-Laure Bretagne-Bignon declares consulting for Astra Zeneca, Servier, Ipsen and accommodations or congress registration support for Merck and Ipsen. Romain Coriat declares honoraria for lectures and Advisory board for: BAYER, Servier, Pierre Fabre, AAA, Merck, Amgen. Christelle de la Fouchardière declares holding an advisory role with Amgen, Bayer, BMS, Daichi-Sankyo, Eisai, Imescia, Incyte, Lilly, Merck, MSD, Pierre Fabre Oncologie, Roche, and Servier; receiving grants from Pierre Fabre and Servier outside of the submitted work; receiving fees from Ipsen, Eisai, Pierre Fabre, Servier, being an invited speaker outside of the submitted work. Julien Edeline declares consulting or advisory role for BTG, Bristol Myers Squibb, AstraZeneca, Bayer, Ipsen, AstraZeneca, MSD, Eisai, Boston Scientific, Roche, Basilea, Merck Serono, Servier; research Funding from Bristol Myers Squibb (Inst), BeiGene (Inst); travel, accommodations or expenses from Amgen, Bristol Myers Squibb, Roche. Astrid Lièvre declares honoraria for lectures from Amgen, Astellas, Astra-Zeneca, Bayer, BMS, Incyte, Ipsen, Leo-pharma, Mylan, Novartis, Pierre Fabre, Roche, Servier and Viatris; consulting/advisory relationship from AAA, Astellas, Bayer, BMS, Incyte, Pierre Fabre and Servier; travel, accommodations or congress registration support from Bayer, Boehringer, Ipsen, Mylan, MSD, Pierre Fabre, Roche and Servier; research funding from Bayer (Inst), Lilly (Inst). Sylvain Manfredi declares travel accommodation from MSD, AMGEN. Cindy Neuzillet declares Honoraria and consulting from Amgen, AstraZeneca, Baxter, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Fresenius Kabi, Incyte Biosciences, Merck, MSD, Mundipharma, Novartis, Nutricia, OSE Immunotherapeutics, Pierre Fabre, Roche, Sanofi, Servier, Viatris, as well as research funding AstraZeneca, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Fresenius Kabi, Nutricia, OSE Immunotherapeutics, Roche, Servier, Viatris. Valérie Paradis declares honoraria for lectures from Incyte. Anthony Turpin declares personal fees from Servier, Viatris, Incyte Bioscience, BMS, Merck and grants and personal fees from AstraZeneca and MSD. Olivier Bouché declares consulting or advisory role for Pierre Fabre, Amgen, Bayer, Servier, MSD, Deciphera, Apmonia Therapeutics and Merck outside the submitted work. David Malka declares honoraria for Roche, Amgen, Bayer, Merck Serono, Servier, Sanofi, Pierre Fabre, Viatris, Bristol Myers Squibb, MSD Oncology, LEO Pharma, Incyte, AstraZeneca; consulting or advisory role: Roche, Sanofi, Merck Serono, MSD, Servier, Bayer, Incyte, Amgen, Bristol Myers Squib, Taiho Oncology, AbbVie, AstraZeneca, Pierre Fabre; travel, accommodations or expenses from Roche, Bayer, Sanofi, Merck Serono, Amgen, Servier, Pierre Fabre, Bristol Myers Squibb/Pfizer, MSD, Viatris. All remaining authors have declared no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2024
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29. Imaging and prognostic characterization of fat-containing hepatocellular carcinoma subtypes.
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Faure A, Dioguardi Burgio M, Cannella R, Sartoris R, Bouattour M, Hobeika C, Cauchy F, Trapani L, Beaufrère A, Vilgrain V, and Ronot M
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- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Aged, Prognosis, Retrospective Studies, Hepatectomy, Adipose Tissue diagnostic imaging, Adipose Tissue pathology, Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease diagnostic imaging, Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease complications, Adult, Liver Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular diagnostic imaging, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods
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Purpose: Steatohepatitic hepatocellular carcinoma (SH-HCC) is characterized by intratumoral fat with > 50% inflammatory changes. However, intratumoral fat (with or without inflammation) can also be found in not-otherwise specified HCC (NOS-HCC). We compared the imaging features and outcome of resected HCC containing fat on pathology including SH-HCC (> 50% steatohepatitic component), NOS-HCC with < 50% steatohepatitic component (SH-NOS-HCC), and fatty NOS-HCC (no steatohepatitic component)., Material and Methods: From September 2012 to June 2021, 94 patients underwent hepatic resection for fat-containing HCC on pathology. Imaging features and categories were assessed using LIRADS v2018. Fat quantification was performed on chemical-shift MRI. Recurrence-free and overall survival were estimated., Results: Twenty-one patients (26%) had nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH). The median intra-tumoral fat fraction was 8%, with differences between SH-HCC and SH-NOS-HCC (9.5% vs. 5% p = 0.03). There was no difference in major LI-RADS features between all groups; most tumors were classified as LR-4/5. A mosaic architecture on MRI was rare (7%) in SH-HCC, a fat in mass on CT was more frequently depicted (48%) in SH-HCC. A combination of NASH with no mosaic architecture on MRI or NASH with fat in mass on CT yielded excellent specificity for diagnosing SH-HCC (97.6% and 97.7%, respectively). The median recurrence-free and overall survival were 58 and 87 months, with no difference between groups (p = 0.18 and p = 0.69)., Conclusion: In patients with NASH, an SH-HCC may be suspected in L4/LR-5 observations with no mosaic architecture at MRI or with fat in mass on CT. Oncological outcomes appear similar between fat-containing HCC subtypes., (© 2024. Italian Society of Medical Radiology.)
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- 2024
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30. Ultrasound-based steatosis grading system using 2D-attenuation imaging: An individual patient data meta-analysis with external validation.
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Hobeika C, Ronot M, Guiu B, Ferraioli G, Iijima H, Tada T, Lee DH, Kuroda H, Lee YH, Lee JM, Kim SY, Cassinotto C, Maiocchi L, Raimondi A, Nishimura T, Kumada T, Kwon EY, Jang JK, Correas JM, Valla D, Vilgrain V, and Dioguardi Burgio M
- Abstract
Background and Aims: Noninvasive tools assessing steatosis, such as ultrasonography-based 2D-attenuation imaging (ATI), are needed to tackle the worldwide burden of steatotic liver disease. This one-stage individual patient data (IPD) meta-analysis aimed to create an ATI-based steatosis grading system., Approach and Results: A systematic review (EMBASE + MEDLINE, 2018-2022) identified studies, including patients with histologically or magnetic resonance imaging proton-density fat fraction (MRI-PDFF)-verified ATI for grading steatosis (S0 to S3). One-stage IPD meta-analyses were conducted using generalized mixed models with a random study-specific intercept. Created ATI-based steatosis grading system (aS0 to aS3) was externally validated on a prospective cohort of patients with type 2 diabetes and metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (n=174, histologically and MRI-PDFF-verified steatosis). Eleven enrolled studies included 1374 patients, classified into S0, S1, S2, and S3 in 45.4%, 35.0%, 9.3%, and 10.3% of the cases. ATI was correlated with histological steatosis ( r = 0.60; 95% CI: 0.52, 0.67; p < 0.001) and MRI-PDFF ( r = 0.70; 95% CI: 0.66, 0.73; p < 0.001) but not with liver stiffness ( r = 0.03; 95% CI: -0.04, 0.11, p = 0.343). Steatosis grade was an independent factor associated with ATI (coefficient: 0.24; 95% CI: [0.22, 0.26]; p < 0.001). ATI marginal means within S0, S1, S2, and S3 subpopulations were 0.59 (95% CI: [0.58, 0.61]), 0.69 (95% CI [0.67, 0.71]), 0.78 (95% CI: [0.76, 0.81]), and 0.85 (95% CI: [0.83, 0.88]) dB/cm/MHz; all contrasts between grades were significant ( p < 0.0001). Three ATI thresholds were calibrated to create a new ATI-based steatosis grading system (aS0 to aS3, cutoffs: 0.66, 0.73, and 0.81 dB/cm/MHz). Its external validation showed Obuchowski measures of 0.84 ± 0.02 and 0.82 ± 0.02 with histologically based and MRI-PDFF-based references., Conclusions: ATI is a reliable, noninvasive marker of steatosis. This validated ATI-based steatosis grading system could be valuable in assessing patients with metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease., (Copyright © 2024 American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.)
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- 2024
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31. French Interventional Radiology Centers' Uptake of Transradial Approach and Outpatient Hepatocellular Carcinoma Intra-Arterial Treatments.
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Grégory J, Ronot M, Laurent V, Chabrot P, de Baere T, Chevallier P, Vilgrain V, and Aubé C
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- Humans, Outpatients, Radiology, Interventional, Cross-Sectional Studies, Treatment Outcome, Yttrium Radioisotopes, Ambulatory Care, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular diagnostic imaging, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular therapy, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular pathology, Liver Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Liver Neoplasms therapy, Liver Neoplasms pathology, Chemoembolization, Therapeutic methods
- Abstract
Purpose: This study aims to investigate the uptake of transradial approach (TRA) and outpatient setting for transarterial chemoembolization (TACE) and transarterial radioembolization (TARE) in the treatment of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) among French interventional radiology centers., Materials and Methods: This cross-sectional study was based on a 34-question survey assessing center activity, radial access, and outpatient care. The survey was developed by a working group, tested by two external experts, and distributed to active members of two French radiological societies via a web-based self-reporting questionnaire in March 2022. The survey remained open for eight weeks, with two reminder emails sent to non-responders. Only one answer per center was considered., Results: Of the 44 responding centers, 39% (17/44) performed TRA for TACE and/or TARE, with post-procedure patient comfort as main motivation. Among the 27 centers not performing TRA, 33% (9/27) reported a lack of technical experience, but all 27 intended to adopt TRA within two years. Only six centers performed TACE or TARE in an outpatient setting. Reasons limiting its implementation included TACE for HCC not being a suitable intervention (61%, 27/44) and organizational barriers (41%, 18/44). Among centers not performing outpatient TACE or TARE, 34% (13/38) said "No," 34% (13/38) said "Maybe," and 32% (12/38) said "Yes" when asked about adopting it within two years., Conclusion: French interventional radiologists have low TRA uptake for HCC treatment, but TRA adoption potential exists. Respondents were uncertain about performing TACE or TARE in an outpatient setting within a 2-year horizon., (© 2023. Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature and the Cardiovascular and Interventional Radiological Society of Europe (CIRSE).)
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- 2024
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32. Correction to: French Interventional Radiology Centers' Uptake of Transradial Approach and Outpatient Hepatocellular Carcinoma Intra-arterial Treatments.
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Grégory J, Ronot M, Laurent V, Chabrot P, de Baere T, Chevallier P, Vilgrain V, and Aubé C
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- 2024
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33. The clinical and financial burden of nonhepatocellular carcinoma focal lesions detected during the surveillance of patients with cirrhosis.
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Nahon P, Layese R, Ganne-Carrié N, Moins C, N'Kontchou G, Chaffaut C, Ronot M, Audureau E, Durand-Zaleski I, and Natella PA
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- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Financial Stress, Liver Cirrhosis epidemiology, Liver Cirrhosis complications, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular etiology, Liver Neoplasms etiology
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Background and Aims: HCC surveillance is challenged by the detection of hepatic focal lesions (HFLs) of other types. This study aimed to describe the incidence, characteristics, outcomes, and costs of non-HCC HFL detected during surveillance., Approach and Results: We retrospectively analyzed nonstandardized workup performed in French patients included in HCC surveillance programs recruited in 57 French tertiary centers (ANRS CirVir and CIRRAL cohorts, HCC 2000 trial). The overall cost of workup was evaluated, with an estimation of an average cost per patient for the entire population and per lesion detected. A total of 3295 patients were followed up for 59.8 months, 391 (11.9%) patients developed HCCs (5-year incidence: 12.1%), and 633 (19.2%) developed non-HCC HFLs (5-year incidence: 21.8%). Characterization of non-HCC HFL required a median additional of 0.7 exams per year. A total of 11.8% of non-HCC HFLs were not confirmed on recall procedures, and 19.6% of non-HCC HFLs remained undetermined. A definite diagnosis of benign liver lesions was made in 65.1%, and malignant tumors were diagnosed in 3.5%. The survival of patients with benign or undetermined non-HCC HFL was similar to that of patients who never developed any HFL (5-year survival 92% vs. 88%, p = 0.07). The average cost of the diagnostic workup was 1087€ for non-HCC HFL and €1572 for HCC., Conclusions: Non-HCC HFLs are frequently detected in patients with cirrhosis, and do not impact prognosis, but trigger substantial costs. This burden must be considered in cost-effectiveness analyses of future personalized surveillance strategies., (Copyright © 2023 American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.)
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- 2024
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34. Author Correction: Quantifying iodine concentration in the normal bowel wall using dual-energy CT: influence of patient and contrast characteristics.
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Nehnahi M, Simon G, Moinet R, Piton G, Camelin C, Ronot M, Delabrousse É, and Calame P
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- 2024
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35. Factors Impacting Survival After Transarterial Radioembolization in Patients with Unresectable Intrahepatic Cholangiocarcinoma: A Combined Analysis of the Prospective CIRT Studies.
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Reimer P, Vilgrain V, Arnold D, Balli T, Golfieri R, Loffroy R, Mosconi C, Ronot M, Sengel C, Schaefer N, Maleux G, Munneke G, Peynircioglu B, Sangro B, Kaufmann N, Urdaniz M, Pereira H, de Jong N, and Helmberger T
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- Humans, Bile Ducts, Intrahepatic pathology, Prospective Studies, Retrospective Studies, Yttrium Radioisotopes therapeutic use, Observational Studies as Topic, Bile Duct Neoplasms radiotherapy, Cholangiocarcinoma radiotherapy, Embolization, Therapeutic methods, Liver Neoplasms radiotherapy
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Purpose: Transarterial radioembolization (TARE) with Yttrium-90 resin microspheres is a treatment option for patients with intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (ICC). However, optimising the timing of TARE in relation to systemic therapies and patient selection remains challenging. We report here on the effectiveness, safety, and prognostic factors associated with TARE for ICC in a combined analysis of the prospective observational CIRT studies (NCT02305459 and NCT03256994)., Methods: A combined analysis of 174 unresectable ICC patients enrolled between 2015 and 2020 was performed. Patient characteristics and treatment-related data were collected at baseline; adverse events and time-to-event data (overall survival [OS], progression-free survival [PFS] and hepatic PFS) were collected at every follow-up visit. Log-rank tests and a multivariable Cox proportional hazard model were used to identify prognostic factors., Results: Patients receiving a first-line strategy of TARE in addition to any systemic treatment had a median OS and PFS of 32.5 months and 11.3 months. Patients selected for first-line TARE alone showed a median OS and PFS of 16.2 months and 7.4 months, whereas TARE as 2nd or further treatment-line resulted in a median OS and PFS of 12 and 9.3 months (p = 0.0028), and 5.1 and 3.5 months (p = 0.0012), respectively. Partition model dosimetry was an independent predictor for better OS (HR 0.59 [95% CI 0.37-0.94], p = 0.0259). No extrahepatic disease, no ascites, and < 6.1 months from diagnosis to treatment were independent predictors for longer PFS., Conclusion: This combined analysis indicates that in unresectable ICC, TARE in combination with any systemic treatment is a promising treatment option., Level of Evidence: level 3, Prospective observational., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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36. Automated Assessment of T2-Weighted MRI to Differentiate Malignant and Benign Primary Solid Liver Lesions in Noncirrhotic Livers Using Radiomics.
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Starmans MPA, Miclea RL, Vilgrain V, Ronot M, Purcell Y, Verbeek J, Niessen WJ, Ijzermans JNM, de Man RA, Doukas M, Klein S, and Thomeer MG
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- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Radiomics, Liver Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Liver Neoplasms pathology
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Rationale and Objectives: Distinguishing malignant from benign liver lesions based on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is an important but often challenging task, especially in noncirrhotic livers. We developed and externally validated a radiomics model to quantitatively assess T2-weighted MRI to distinguish the most common malignant and benign primary solid liver lesions in noncirrhotic livers., Materials and Methods: Data sets were retrospectively collected from three tertiary referral centers (A, B, and C) between 2002 and 2018. Patients with malignant (hepatocellular carcinoma and intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma) and benign (hepatocellular adenoma and focal nodular hyperplasia) lesions were included. A radiomics model based on T2-weighted MRI was developed in data set A using a combination of machine learning approaches. The model was internally evaluated on data set A through cross-validation, externally validated on data sets B and C, and compared to visual scoring of two experienced abdominal radiologists on data set C., Results: The overall data set included 486 patients (A: 187, B: 98, and C: 201). The radiomics model had a mean area under the curve (AUC) of 0.78 upon internal validation on data set A and a similar AUC in external validation (B: 0.74 and C: 0.76). In data set C, the two radiologists showed moderate agreement (Cohen's κ: 0.61) and achieved AUCs of 0.86 and 0.82., Conclusion: Our T2-weighted MRI radiomics model shows potential for distinguishing malignant from benign primary solid liver lesions. External validation indicated that the model is generalizable despite substantial MRI acquisition protocol differences. Pending further optimization and generalization, this model may aid radiologists in improving the diagnostic workup of patients with liver lesions., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest W.J.N. is the founder and shareholder of Quantib BV. The other authors of this manuscript declare no relationships with any companies whose products or services may be related to the subject matter of the article., (Copyright © 2024 The Association of University Radiologists. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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37. Study protocol for FASTRAK: a randomised controlled trial evaluating the cost impact and effectiveness of FAST-MRI for HCC suRveillance in pAtients with high risK of liver cancer.
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Nahon P, Ronot M, Sutter O, Natella PA, Baloul S, Durand-Zaleski I, and Audureau E
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- Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Liver Cirrhosis complications, Liver Cirrhosis diagnostic imaging, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Multicenter Studies as Topic, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular diagnostic imaging, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular etiology, Liver Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Liver Neoplasms etiology
- Abstract
Introduction: The surveillance of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) using semi-annual liver ultrasound (US) is justified in patients with cirrhosis. In this context, US has a low sensitivity (<30%) for the detection of HCC at the very early stage (ie, Barcelona clinic liver cancer (BCLC) 0, uninodular tumour <2 cm). The sensitivity of abbreviated liver MRI (AMRI) is reported to exceed 80%, but its use is hampered by costs and availability. Our hypothesis is that AMRI used as a screening examination in patients at high risk of HCC (>3% per year) could increase the rates of patients with a tumour detected at an early stage accessible to curative-intent treatment, and demonstrate its cost-effectiveness in this population., Methods and Analysis: The FASTRAK trial is a multicentre, randomised controlled trial with two parallel arms, aiming for superiority and conducted on patients at high risk for HCC (yearly HCC incidence >3%). Randomisation will be conducted on an individual basis with a centralised approach and stratification by centre. After inclusion in the trial, each patient will be randomly assigned to the experimental group (semi-annual US and AMRI) or the control group (semi-annual US alone). The main objective is to assess the cost/quality-adjusted life year and cost/patient detected with a BCLC 0 HCC in both arms. A total of 944 patients will be recruited in 37 tertiary French centres during a 36-month period and will be followed-up during 36 months., Ethics and Dissemination: The FASTRAK trial received ethical approval on 4 April 2022. Results will be disseminated via publication in peer-reviewed journals as well as presentation at international conferences., Trial Registration Number: Clinical trial number (ClinicaTrials.gov) NCT05095714., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2024. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2024
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38. LI-RADS CT and MRI Ancillary Feature Association with Hepatocellular Carcinoma and Malignancy: An Individual Participant Data Meta-Analysis.
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Dawit H, Lam E, McInnes MDF, van der Pol CB, Bashir MR, Salameh JP, Levis B, Sirlin CB, Chernyak V, Choi SH, Kim SY, Fraum TJ, Tang A, Jiang H, Song B, Wang J, Wilson SR, Kwon H, Kierans AS, Joo I, Ronot M, Song JS, Podgórska J, Rosiak G, Kang Z, Allen BC, and Costa AF
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- Humans, Liver diagnostic imaging, Radiology Information Systems, Middle Aged, Male, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular diagnostic imaging, Liver Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Tomography, X-Ray Computed methods
- Abstract
Background The independent contribution of each Liver Imaging Reporting and Data System (LI-RADS) CT or MRI ancillary feature (AF) has not been established. Purpose To evaluate the association of LI-RADS AFs with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and malignancy while adjusting for LI-RADS major features through an individual participant data (IPD) meta-analysis. Materials and Methods Medline, Embase, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, and Scopus were searched from January 2014 to January 2022 for studies evaluating the diagnostic accuracy of CT and MRI for HCC using LI-RADS version 2014, 2017, or 2018. Using a one-step approach, IPD across studies were pooled. Adjusted odds ratios (ORs) and 95% CIs were derived from multivariable logistic regression models of each AF combined with major features except threshold growth (excluded because of infrequent reporting). Liver observation clustering was addressed at the study and participant levels through random intercepts. Risk of bias was assessed using a composite reference standard and Quality Assessment of Diagnostic Accuracy Studies 2. Results Twenty studies comprising 3091 observations (2456 adult participants; mean age, 59 years ± 11 [SD]; 1849 [75.3%] men) were included. In total, 89% (eight of nine) of AFs favoring malignancy were associated with malignancy and/or HCC, 80% (four of five) of AFs favoring HCC were associated with HCC, and 57% (four of seven) of AFs favoring benignity were negatively associated with HCC and/or malignancy. Nonenhancing capsule (OR = 3.50 [95% CI: 1.53, 8.01]) had the strongest association with HCC. Diffusion restriction (OR = 14.45 [95% CI: 9.82, 21.27]) and mild-moderate T2 hyperintensity (OR = 10.18 [95% CI: 7.17, 14.44]) had the strongest association with malignancy. The strongest negative associations with HCC were parallels blood pool enhancement (OR = 0.07 [95% CI: 0.01, 0.49]) and marked T2 hyperintensity (OR = 0.18 [95% CI: 0.07, 0.45]). Seventeen studies (85%) had a high risk of bias. Conclusion Most LI-RADS AFs were independently associated with HCC, malignancy, or benignity as intended when adjusting for major features. © RSNA, 2024 Supplemental material is available for this article. See also the editorial by Crivellaro in this issue.
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- 2024
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39. Association of LI-RADS and Histopathologic Features with Survival in Patients with Solitary Resected Hepatocellular Carcinoma.
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Cannella R, Matteini F, Dioguardi Burgio M, Sartoris R, Beaufrère A, Calderaro J, Mulé S, Reizine E, Luciani A, Laurent A, Seror O, Ganne-Carrié N, Wagner M, Scatton O, Vilgrain V, Cauchy F, Hobeika C, and Ronot M
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- Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Research Design, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular diagnostic imaging, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular surgery, Liver Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Liver Neoplasms surgery
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Background Both Liver Imaging Reporting and Data System (LI-RADS) and histopathologic features provide prognostic information in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), but whether LI-RADS is independently associated with survival is uncertain. Purpose To assess the association of LI-RADS categories and features with survival outcomes in patients with solitary resected HCC. Materials and Methods This retrospective study included patients with solitary resected HCC from three institutions examined with preoperative contrast-enhanced CT and/or MRI between January 2008 and December 2019. Three independent readers evaluated the LI-RADS version 2018 categories and features. Histopathologic features including World Health Organization tumor grade, microvascular and macrovascular invasion, satellite nodules, and tumor capsule were recorded. Overall survival and disease-free survival were assessed with Cox regression models. Marginal effects of nontargetoid features on survival were estimated using propensity score matching. Results A total of 360 patients (median age, 64 years [IQR, 56-70 years]; 280 male patients) were included. At CT and MRI, the LI-RADS LR-M category was associated with increased risk of recurrence (CT: hazard ratio [HR] = 1.83 [95% CI: 1.26, 2.66], P = .001; MRI: HR = 2.22 [95% CI: 1.56, 3.16], P < .001) and death (CT: HR = 2.47 [95% CI: 1.72, 3.55], P < .001; MRI: HR = 1.80 [95% CI: 1.32, 2.46], P < .001) independently of histopathologic features. The presence of at least one nontargetoid feature was associated with an increased risk of recurrence (CT: HR = 1.80 [95% CI: 1.36, 2.38], P < .001; MRI: HR = 1.93 [95% CI: 1.81, 2.06], P < .001) and death (CT: HR = 1.51 [95% CI: 1.10, 2.07], P < .010) independently of histopathologic features. In matched samples, recurrence was associated with the presence of at least one nontargetoid feature at CT (HR = 2.06 [95% CI: 1.15, 3.66]; P = .02) or MRI (HR = 1.79 [95% CI: 1.01, 3.20]; P = .048). Conclusion In patients with solitary resected HCC, LR-M category and nontargetoid features were negatively associated with survival independently of histopathologic characteristics. © RSNA, 2024 Supplemental material is available for this article. See also the editorial by Kartalis and Grigoriadis in this issue.
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- 2024
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40. Can radiomics outperform pathology for tumor grading?
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Ronot M and Soyer P
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- Humans, Neoplasm Grading, Radiomics, Neuroendocrine Tumors, Pancreatic Neoplasms pathology
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Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest Maxime Ronot is the Gastrointestinal Section Editor of Diagnostic & Interventional Imaging. Philippe Soyer is the Editor-in-Chief of Diagnostic & Interventional Imaging. The authors have no conflicts of interest to disclose in relation to this article.
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- 2024
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