Article
Case Report
M L Rokade1,

1Consultant Radiologist, Jupiter Lifeline Hospitals, Eastern Express Highway, Thane, Maharashtra. E-mail: drmlrokade@gmail.com

Received Date: 2023-05-15,
Accepted Date: 2023-05-22,
Published Date: 2023-07-31
Year: 2023, Volume: 13, Issue: 3, Page no. 141-143, DOI: 10.26463/rjms.13_3_2
Views: 294, Downloads: 16
Licensing Information:
CC BY NC 4.0 ICON
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0.
Abstract

The non-classical focal liver injury is confused with tumor progression or metastasis. Radiological appearance can prevent confusion and needless invasive biopsies. We encountered a 24-year old female patient with invasive ductal carcinoma of the right breast, grade 2 ER/PR and Her2neu positive with axillary and pectoral lymph nodal involvement treated with adjuvant chemotherapy. In surveillance ultrasound of the abdomen, the sonologist reported an altered area of echogenicity in the liver. Due to concern for metastasis, this was followed by a PET CT. A subcapsular hypoattenuating lesion was reported and referred to the radiology team for further work up and biopsy consideration. The classical straight edge sign demarcation was noted on the MRI, as well as on the PET CT. A diagnosis of focal liver injury post radiation was made and the patient is being followed up closely and continues to be asymptomatic.

<p>The non-classical focal liver injury is confused with tumor progression or metastasis. Radiological appearance can prevent confusion and needless invasive biopsies. We encountered a 24-year old female patient with invasive ductal carcinoma of the right breast, grade 2 ER/PR and Her2neu positive with axillary and pectoral lymph nodal involvement treated with adjuvant chemotherapy. In surveillance ultrasound of the abdomen, the sonologist reported an altered area of echogenicity in the liver. Due to concern for metastasis, this was followed by a PET CT. A subcapsular hypoattenuating lesion was reported and referred to the radiology team for further work up and biopsy consideration. The classical straight edge sign demarcation was noted on the MRI, as well as on the PET CT. A diagnosis of focal liver injury post radiation was made and the patient is being followed up closely and continues to be asymptomatic.</p>
Keywords
Radiation, Liver injury, IGRT, PET-CT, Straight edge sign
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Introduction

Radiation oncology has evolved over time. Today it is more precise and conformal. Classical liver injury is uncommon manifesting as severe acute liver failure. It results from hepatocellular injury due to radiation. The non-classical focal liver injury is confused with tumor progression or metastasis. Radiological appearance as a focal hypoattenuating circumscribed region, the straight edge sign can prevent this confusion and unwarranted invasive biopsies.

Case Presentation

A 42-year female, a case of invasive ductal carcinoma of the right breast, grade 2 ER/PR and Her2neu positive with axillary and pectoral lymph nodal involvement was treated with adjuvant chemotherapy.

Post chemotherapy, there was significant metabolic regression of the primary mass and the involved lymph nodes which were prior PET active with high SUV. Subsequently the patient underwent modified radical mastectomy and lymph nodal dissection. Patient received radiation to the tumor bed, 40 GY in 15 fractions for three weeks with IG-3D CRT. Patient was put on tablet Tamoxifen 20 mg once a day and was followed by an oncologist. During the surveillance ultrasound examination of the abdomen, the sonologist reported an altered area of echogenicity in the liver. In view of concern for metastasis, this was followed by PET CT.

A subcapsular hypoattenuating lesion was reported and referred to the radiology team for further work up and biopsy consideration. MRI of the liver was done which showed an altered signal area with increased diffusion in the right lobe. This was also T1 hypointense T2 hyperintense with no significant enhancement (Figure 1 and 2).

Rest of the liver appeared normal. Patient’s CBC and liver enzymes were in normal range. There was no abdominal discomfort reported and the abdomen was soft on palpation. The classical straight edge sign demarcation was noted on the MRI as well as on the PET CT. Diagnosis of focal liver injury post radiation was made. Patient is being followed up closely and continues to be asymptomatic.

Discussion

Radiation induced liver injury is a form of hepatocellular injury due to radiation.1 Focal liver injury is also described as a non-classical form of liver injury as it involves only a focal area of liver damage. Unlike classical radiation induced liver injury that occurs when the liver threshold of 30 gy is exceeded presenting with severe hepatic failure, the non-classical form could have mild to severe presentation depending on liver reserve.2 Radiation induced liver injury as noted above could be Classical and segmental or Non-classical type. The classical type usually happens 1-3 months after radiation treatment, presents with fatigue, increasing abdominal girth due to ascites. It is usually anicteric type with classical elevation of alkaline phosphatase (ALP) to more than two-fold.

Histopathology reveals a pattern of veno occlusive changes. Erythrocytes trapped in reticulin are noted obliterating the central venous lumina leading to central hepatocyte congestion and cellular injury.3 Secondary fibrotic changes are seen with functional parenchymal loss. The focal involvement which is now more common results due to hepatocyte damage in few segments of the liver. This may go unnoticed; however can manifest as abdominal discomfort and elevation of liver enzymes. In poor hepatic reserve, such as in those with cirrhosis and hepatitis B infection can present with liver decompensation.

On CT imaging, the irradiated areas appear as focal hypoattenuating regions conforming to the radiation ports. In the acute phase of PET CT, these areas can show increased activity and can be confused with metastasis or disease progression. On MRI, the involved areas show T2 hyperintensity due to hepatocellular swelling and edema. These changes can be easily confused for pseudoprogression or metastasis.

In a study conducted involving 205 patients undergoing chemo radiotherapy for esophageal cancer, eight patients developed localized radiation induced liver injury in the caudate and adjacent lobes mimicking metastasis during restaging and therapeutic response assessment.4 The observed incidence was three percent. Concurrent chemotherapy can be additive in liver injury. Radiotherapy is known to have immunosuppressive effects.5

This mechanism has been potentially suspected for reactivation of hepatitis B virus in patients treated with liver-directed radiotherapy for Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Hepatitis B DNA titers should be monitored preand post therapy.

Prevention of liver injury can be achieved by identifying any risk factors for liver decompensation. Using advanced techniques for precise dose delivery, preventing dose spill over and reducing the total liver dose can help in reducing radiation induced liver damage. Various monitoring criteria exist. These include the Child-Pugh score, model for end-stage liver disease (MELD), CLIP, GRETECH albumin-bilirubin (ALBI), protein induced by vitamin K absence (PIVKA) and albumin scores.

Conclusion

In the present era, the classical liver injury which manifests as severe liver failure is rare. Non-classical focal liver injury is more common which can be identified by its radiological appearance and more benign outcome. It should not be confused with metastasis. Applying dose constraints and reducing the dose to the non-target tissues can be preventative, reducing the incidence and severity.

Financial Support

Nil

Conflict of Interest

Nil

Supporting File
References
  1. Benson B, Madan R, Kilambi, Chander S. Radiation induced liver injury: A clinical update. J Egypt Natl Canc Inst 2016;28(1):7-11.
  2. Li JX, Zhang RJ, Qiu MQ, Yan LY, Long MY, Zhong JH, et al. Non-classic radiation induced liver disease after intensity modulated radiotherapy for child pugh grade B patients with locally advanced hepatocellular carcinoma. Radiat Oncol 2023;18(1):48.
  3. Takamatsu S, Kazuto K, Kobayashi S, Yoneda N, Yoshida K, Inoue D, et al. Pathology and images of radiation induced hepatitis: a review article. Jpn J Rdiol 2018;36(4):241-256.
  4. Grant MJ, Didier RA, Stevens JS, Beyder DD. Radiation induced liver disease as a mimic of liver metastasis at serial PET/CT during neoadjuvant chemoradiation of distal esophageal cancer. Abdom Imaging 2014:39(5):963-968.
  5. Cheng J, Pei HH, Sun J, Xie QX, Li JB. Radiation induced hepatitis B virus reactivation in case of hepatocellular carcinoma: A case report. Oncol Lett 2015;10(5):3213-3215.
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