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Changes in the ultrasound presentation of hepatocellular carcinoma: a center's three decades of experience.

Authors :
Giannitrapani, Lydia
Amodeo, Simona
Mirarchi, Luigi
Terranova, Antonino
Seidita, Aurelio
Mozzini, Chiara
Cabibi, Daniela
Brancatelli, Giuseppe
Licata, Anna
Soresi, Maurizio
Source :
Journal of Ultrasound; Jun2024, Vol. 27 Issue 2, p383-391, 9p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Purpose: Ultrasound (US) surveillance is a cornerstone for early diagnosis of HCC, anyway US presentation has undergone significant changes. With the aim of evaluating the effects of US surveillance program in the real-world clinical practice, we wanted to evaluate US presentation of HCCs over the last 30 years and the differences of HCCs presentation according to etiology. Methods: 174 patients diagnosed between 1993 and 98 (G1), 96 between 2003 and 08 (G2), 102 between 2013 and 18 (G3), were compared. US patterns were: single, multiple or diffuse nodules. The echo-patterns: iso-, hypo-, hyper-echoic, or mixed. In G1, the HCC diagnosis was mainly histologic; in G2 by EASL 2001 and AASLD 2005, in G3 AASLD 2011, EASL 2012, and AISF 2013 guidelines. Results: HCV was the most frequent etiology, dropping between G1 (81%) and G3 (66%) (P < 0.01), metabolic increased between G1 (5%) and G3 (14%) (P < 0.01). Single HCC was more prevalent in G3 vs G1 (65.6% vs 40%) (P < 0.0001), multiple nodules in G1 (50%) vs G3 (33.3%) (P < 0.02) and diffuse in G1 (16%) vs G2 (2%) and vs G3 (1%) (P < 0.001). The most frequent echo-pattern was hypo-echoic G1 (50%) vs G2 (79%) and G1 vs G3 (65%) (P < 0.01). Iso-echoic pattern was the least frequent (7–12%). Mixed pattern decreased from G1 (28%) to G3 (12%) (P < 0.002). In G3 there were more multiple or diffuse HCCs in metabolic (P < 0.03). Conclusion: US presentation became less severe due to surveillance programs. HCV remains the most frequent cause, an increase in metabolic etiology has been shown throughout the decades. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19713495
Volume :
27
Issue :
2
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Journal of Ultrasound
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
177896714
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s40477-024-00888-7