Cancer Management and Research (Sep 2020)
Evaluation of Alterations to Bile Ducts and Laboratory Values During the First 3 Months After Irreversible Electroporation of Malignant Hepatic Tumors
Abstract
Wolf Bäumler,1 Mareike Sebald,2 Ingo Einspieler,1 Andreas Schicho,1 Jan Schaible,1 Philipp Wiggermann,3 Marco Dollinger,1 Christian Stroszczynski,1 Lukas Philipp Beyer4 1Department of Radiology, University Hospital Regensburg, Regensburg, Germany; 2Department of Radiology, Municipal Hospital Landshut, Landshut, Germany; 3Department of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, Hospital Braunschweig, Braunschweig, Germany; 4Department of Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology, Ernst von Bergmann Hospital, Potsdam, GermanyCorrespondence: Wolf BäumlerDepartment of Radiology, University Hospital Regensburg, Regensburg 93053, GermanyTel +49 941 944 7410Email [email protected]: To assess the incidence and evolution of biliary alterations adjacent to the ablation area in patients with hepatic malignancies during the first 3 months after percutaneous irreversible electroporation (IRE) and to investigate associated changes in laboratory values.Material and Methods: Bile ducts located within a ≤ 1.0 cm radius of the ablation zone were analyzed in 45 patients by preinterventional and postinterventional MRI (1– 3 days, 6 weeks, and 3 months after IRE). Moreover, levels of alkaline phosphatase (AP) and serum bilirubin (SB) were examined for evidence of bile duct injury. Biliary alterations and the presence of postinterventional-elevated laboratory levels were correlated with features of the lesions, patients, ablation procedures, and laboratory values.Results: A total of 80 bile ducts were located within a 1.0 cm radius of the ablation zone: 59 were encased, 16 were abutting and 5 were located within a radius of 0.1– 1.0 cm of the ablation area. In total, 38 biliary injuries (narrowing, n=22; dilatation, n=14; biloma, n=2) were detected, 3 cases of narrowing occurred for the first time 6 weeks and 3 months after IRE, 21 alterations (dilatation: n=9; narrowing; n=10; biloma: n=2) had resolved during the first 6 weeks, 1 alteration (dilatation: n=1) had resolved by the last follow-up control. Three months after IRE, 19 patients showed elevated levels of AP, whereas SB levels were increased in 10 cases. No significant association between biliary alterations or postinterventional-elevated laboratory values and the investigated characteristics of lesions, patients, ablation procedures or laboratory values could be proven.Conclusion: Different alterations of bile ducts adjacent to an IRE ablation zone are common, of which dilatation and especially narrowing commonly represent a long-term complication after IRE. Moreover, a definite correlation between the frequently observed prolonged post-ablative elevation of AP- and SB-levels and the postinterventional biliary alterations could not be proven.Keywords: bile ducts, hepatic tumors, electroporation