Frontiers in Oncology (Jun 2014)

Monitoring of total and regional liver function after SIRT

  • Roelof J Bennink,
  • Kasia P Cieslak,
  • Otto M van Delden,
  • Krijn P van Lienden,
  • Heinz-Josef eKlümpen,
  • Peter L Jansen,
  • Thomas M van Gulik

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2014.00152
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4

Abstract

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Selective internal radiation therapy (SIRT) is a promising treatment modality for advanced hepatocellular carcinoma or metastatic liver cancer. SIRT is usually well tolerated. However, in most patients, SIRT will result in a (temporary) decreased liver function. Occasionally patients develop radioembolization induced liver disease (REILD). In case of a high tumor burden of the liver it could be beneficial to perform SIRT in two sessions enabling the primary untreated liver segments to guarantee liver function until function in the treated segments has recovered, or functional hypertrophy has occurred.Clinically used liver function tests provide evidence of only one of the many liver functions, though all of them lack the possibility of assessment of segmental (regional) liver function.Hepatobiliary scintigraphy (HBS) has been validated as a tool to assess total and regional liver function in liver surgery. It is also used to assess segmental liver function before and after portal vein embolization. HBS is considered a valuable quantitative liver function test enabling assessment of segmental liver function recovery after regional intervention and determination of future remnant liver function.We present two cases in which HBS was used to monitor total and regional liver function in a patient after repeated whole liver SIRT complicated with REILD and a patient treated unilaterally without complications.

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