151. Role of MR in the differentiation of IgG4-related from non-IgG4-related hepatic inflammatory pseudotumor
- Author
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Ruofan Sheng, Li Yang, Mengsu Zeng, Caizhong Chen, Yuan Ji, and Chang-Wen Zhai
- Subjects
Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Biopsy ,Autoimmunity ,Stain ,Granuloma, Plasma Cell ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Lesion ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Predictive Value of Tests ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,Effective diffusion coefficient ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,Pathological ,Retrospective Studies ,integumentary system ,Hepatology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Liver Diseases ,fungi ,Gastroenterology ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Middle Aged ,Immunohistochemistry ,Hyperintensity ,Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Liver ,Homogeneous ,Immunoglobulin G ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Inflammatory pseudotumor ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Biomarkers - Abstract
Background Hepatic inflammatory pseudotumor (IPT) is classified into 2 types based on IgG4 stain: IgG4-related and non-IgG4-related; the two types differ not only in their pathological characteristics, but also in the clinical features. This study aimed to investigate the MR character of hepatic IPT, and differentiate the IgG4-related IPT from the non-IgG4-related IPT. Methods Twenty-five patients with 27 histologically proven hepatic IPTs were retrospectively analyzed. Ten lesions were diagnosed as IgG4-related IPT, and the other 17 as non-IgG4-related IPT. The MR signal features on T1, T2-weighted, dynamic-enhanced, and diffusion-weighted imaging were evaluated and compared. Results The dominant lesions were subcapsularly distributed (n=17, 63.0%) with clear boundary (n=20, 74.1%), and showed progressive enhancement pattern (n=21, 77.8%) with diffuse homogeneous (n=12, 44.4%) or heterogeneous (n=8, 29.6%) hyperintensity, accompanied by delayed capsule-like enhancement (n=17, 63.0%) and central nonenhanced areas (n=18, 66.7%). Morphological features (P>0.05) were not sufficient to differentiate IgG4-related IPT from non-IgG4-related IPT; the wash-out pattern was only found in 2 IgG4-related IPT, while the progressive enhancement pattern was more common in the non-IgG4-related lesions (n=16) (P=0.022). During portal and delayed phases, iso-/hypoenhanced lesions were only seen in 3 IgG4-related IPT, and circular-enhanced lesions (n=5) existed exceptionally in the non-IgG4-related group with significant differences (P=0.029 and 0.027). Most IgG4-related IPTs had lower apparent diffusion coefficient compared with the liver parenchyma (n=6), while most non-IgG4-related IPTs had higher apparent diffusion coefficient value (n=13) (P=0.046). Conclusions Although MR images of hepatic IPT have certain characteristics, they are not enough to differentiate IgG4-related IPT from non-IgG4-related IPT. The enhancement pattern, signal features on portal and delayed phases, and the apparent diffusion coefficient value of the lesion may be helpful for the diagnosis.
- Published
- 2017