Interactive Transcript
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The next few cases will cover the approach
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to evaluating treatment response in
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patients who have undergone local-regional
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therapy for hepatocellular carcinomas.
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I'm going to start by just sort of
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outlining a few general principles that
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go behind some of the treatment options
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that are available for patients with HCC.
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While treatment options are multifactorial and
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often require a multidisciplinary approach.
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There are some general considerations
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that outline many of these decisions.
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And the first is that every patient is sort
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of evaluated to see whether they can undergo
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surgical resection of the lesion itself.
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This is an option that really allows
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for curative therapy, ideally.
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They would like to resect these tumors if
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possible, but as it turns out, most patients
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are not really eligible for surgical resection,
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either due to the amount of tumor involvement
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or extension at the time that they are presented
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to the referring providers, or, and or, because
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of the degree of underlying liver dysfunction.
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So either they have a lot of disease and
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the liver is not doing very well, so they
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can't undergo surgery in a very safe manner.
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So the next option that I look for
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is potentially liver transplant.
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And this also allows for a curative option
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in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma.
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Now there's some eligibility
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criteria for patients who are
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allowed to get a liver transplant.
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Some of these criteria include the size of
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the hepatocellular carcinoma, the number of
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hepatocellular carcinomas in the patient.
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I'm not going to go through those
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criteria, but one of the issues that
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happens with transplants is there are
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issues with lifelong immunosuppression.
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You know, that has its own risks, but also that
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there is a overall shortage of transplants.
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So there's not enough transplants to
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go around to supply all the patients
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who need their livers transplanted.
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So then for patients who are ineligible
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for surgery or transplant, there
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are a number of local-regional
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therapies that one could consider.
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And some of these can be used in patients
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who are waiting to get a liver transplant
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as a means to maintain their eligibility.
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So when we talk about local-regional treatment
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or therapies for hepatocellular carcinoma,
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they can really be categorized as percutaneous
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ablative therapies or transarterial therapies.
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Now under percutaneous ablation therapies you
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have a variety of options that you can do and
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some of the more common ones that are used in
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this day and age are radiofrequency ablation
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or microwave ablation and these utilize thermal
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ablation in order to induce tumor necrosis.
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So you percutaneously enter a catheter or an
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electrode essentially to the liver tumor, and
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you current, in the case of a radiofrequency
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ablation, or microwaves, in the same thing of
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microwave ablation, and use thermal ablation
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techniques in order to kill the tumor itself.
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Now, there's certain criteria that
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patients have to meet in order to be
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eligible for radiofrequency ablation.
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Ideally, these liver tumors are small, less
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than three to four centimeters in size,
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Ideally, when you look at them within the
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liver parenchyma, these tumors are located
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within a centimeter of the liver parenchyma
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itself, and they're not close to any major
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vessels or not very close to the biliary tract.
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So when we look at it in the setting
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of a tumor board, these are evaluated
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by interventional radiologists and they
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assess whether the patients are, uh,
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candidates for this type of therapy.
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The transarterial techniques both take
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advantage of the fact that HCCs are a very
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important derive their blood supply, therefore
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their nutrients, from the hepatic artery.
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So they're fed by the hepatic artery, and
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if we are able to deliver chemotherapeutic
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agents, or radioactive agents, through
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the hepatic artery, you can induce direct
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treatment of the tumor itself, and you
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can also have an embolic effect, i.e.,
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cutting off that blood supply to the tumor.
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The two main treatments that are used for
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transarterial therapies are transarterial
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chemoembolization and radioembolization.
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And this is done using a
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radioactive element, uh, Y90.
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And these generally are for more widespread
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disease that needs to be treated.
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It's not very, sort of, localized hepatocellular
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carcinoma widespread disease within the liver.
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However, radioembolization tends
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to work better if there's evidence
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of tumor thrombus in the vessels.
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As opposed to, uh, not thrombus, in
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which case sometimes would be better.
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And in both these instances, you're
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accessing the hepatic artery.
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With TACE, you're giving
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a chemotherapeutic agent.
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With radioembolization, a radioactive agent
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that is directly treating the tumor itself
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and has a secondary effect of reducing its
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blood supply, thereby, um, inducing necrosis.
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So, in addition to developing a LI-RADS
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to assess for liver lesions, the LI-RADS
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committee, um, also developed a standardized
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approach to evaluate patients after
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they've received local regional therapy.
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You know, the basic thing that you're
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looking for after any sort of these
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treatment regimens is an avascular cavity.
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So if you have a hepatocellular carcinoma
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that has arterial hyperenhancement within
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it, and you have treated this tumor via one
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of your techniques that you have over here,
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you're looking for an avascular cavity.
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Inside of it should be as dark or as black
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as possible with a very, very thin rim, if
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any, rim of tiny enhancement over there.
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And so in terms of the treatment response,
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LI-RADS sort of categorizes lesions as follows:
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So you can have LI-RADS treatment
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response equal non-viable.
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That tells you that the tumor has
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been treated in its entirety, there's
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no internal lesional enhancement.
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And if there's any enhancement, it's the
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expected enhancement you see associated with,
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uh, sort of the treatment effect of the tumor.
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On the other hand, you can have LI-RADS
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treatment response viable, so that
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tells you that there is persistent
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enhancement within this lesion.
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It could be a regular nodular mass
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like enhancement, and that enhancement
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within it can have arterial phase hyperenhancement,
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it can have washout, or
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it has enhancement that's similar to
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what it looked like prior to treatment.
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In the middle, you have a LI-RADS
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category that is equivocal.
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So in these instances, you're just
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not sure whether it's been adequately
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treated or if there's a residual tumor.
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And those patients are evaluated on short
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term imaging follow-up to see if anything
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has come of that finding that you saw.
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And the subset of patients
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will be LI-RADS non-evaluable.
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These are ones who have imaging
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studies that are either missing
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certain sequences or are too motioning.
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You just can't evaluate the presence
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or absence of a residual tumor.
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In terms of lesions that are qualified
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as a viable tumor, LI-RADS has a specific
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way that it wants to standardize how you
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measure residual or recurrent disease.
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For example, if you have an
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HCC over here, it gets treated.
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As a result, you have a cavity over here,
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and, you know, much of it remains avascular,
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but you still have, you know, an area over
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here that is persistently vascular.
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The best way, or the correct way,
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to measure this is as follows:
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You take the longest dimension through
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the enhancing area of the treated lesion
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without crossing the lesion itself.
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So that instance would be somewhere
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from here all the way to about here.
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You take this measurement, provide
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that measurement, and say that's the area
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of residual viability associated with
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this treated hepatocellular carcinoma.
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