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. 2020 Sep 14:12:8425-8433.
doi: 10.2147/CMAR.S261838. eCollection 2020.

Evaluation of Alterations to Bile Ducts and Laboratory Values During the First 3 Months After Irreversible Electroporation of Malignant Hepatic Tumors

Affiliations

Evaluation of Alterations to Bile Ducts and Laboratory Values During the First 3 Months After Irreversible Electroporation of Malignant Hepatic Tumors

Wolf Bäumler et al. Cancer Manag Res. .

Abstract

Purpose: 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; electroporation; hepatic tumors.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors report no conflicts of interest in this work.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
An 80-year-old woman with a centrally located HCC. (A) Coronal contrast-enhanced T1 vibe 3d fat-suppressed magnetic resonance imaging, conducted preinterventionally during the hepatobiliary phase, shows a centrally located HCC (white arrow) and a left major bile duct without any relevant narrowing (red arrow). (B) One day after IRE, coronal contrast-enhanced T1 vibe 3d fat-suppressed magnetic resonance imaging, conducted during the hepatobiliary phase, shows a hypointense ablation defect (white arrow) and a newly occurred narrowing of the left major bile duct (red arrow).
Figure 2
Figure 2
A 67-year-old man with a centrally located HCC. (A) Axial contrast-enhanced T1 vibe 3d fat-suppressed magnetic resonance imaging, conducted preinterventionally during the hepatobiliary phase, shows a centrally located HCC (white arrow) and a major bile duct without any dilatation (red arrow). (B) One day after IRE, axial contrast-enhanced T1 vibe 3d fat-suppressed magnetic resonance imaging, conducted during the hepatobiliary phase, shows a slightly grown, hypointense ablation defect (white arrow) and a newly occurred mild dilatation of the major bile duct (red arrow).

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