# Contralateral Hypertrophy Post Yttrium-90 Transarterial Radioembolization in Patients With Hepatocellular Carcinoma and Portal Vein Tumor Thrombus

**Authors:** Anastasia Hadjivassiliou, Xinchi Hou, Leandro Cardarelli-Leite, Ivan S Klyuzhin, François Bénard, Darren Klass, Stephen G.F. Ho, Arman Rahmim, David Liu

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.59260 · 2024-04-29

## TL;DR

This study explores how liver growth after a specific treatment can help make surgery possible for some liver cancer patients.

## Contribution

The study identifies predictors of liver growth after Yttrium-90 treatment in patients with liver cancer and tumor thrombus.

## Key findings

- The ratio of disease-free target liver volume to spared liver volume correlates with liver hypertrophy.
- Disease-free target liver volume to total liver volume ratio is a strong predictor of liver growth.
- More irradiated disease-free liver volume is associated with greater hypertrophy.

## Abstract

Objectives

Contralateral hypertrophy of non-irradiated liver following Yttrium-90 (90Y) transarterial radioembolization (TARE) is increasingly recognized as an option to facilitate curative surgical resection in patients that would otherwise not be surgical candidates due to a small future liver remnant (FLR). This study aimed to investigate the correlation between patient features and liver hypertrophy and identify potential predictors for liver growth in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and portal vein tumor thrombus (PVTT) undergoing TARE.

Methodology

Twenty-three patients with HCC and PVTT were included. Contralateral liver hypertrophy was assessed at six months posttreatment based on CT or MRI imaging. Thirteen patient features were selected for statistical and prediction analysis. Univariate Spearman correlation and analysis of variance (ANOVA) tests were performed. Subsequently, four feature-selection methods based on multivariate analysis were used to improve model generalization performance. The selected features were applied to train linear regression models, with fivefold cross-validation to assess the performance of the predicted models.

Results

The ratio of disease-free target liver volume to spared liver volume and total liver volume showed the highest correlations with contralateral hypertrophy (P-values = 0.03 and 0.05, respectively). In three out of four feature-selection methods, the feature of disease-free target liver volume to total liver volume ratio was selected, having positive correlations with the outcome and suggesting that more hypertrophy may be expected when more volume of disease-free liver is irradiated.

Conclusions

Contralateral hypertrophy post-90Y TARE can be an option for facilitating surgical resection in patients with otherwise small FLR.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** Yttrium-90 (PubChem CID 104760)
- **Diseases:** hepatocellular carcinoma (MONDO:0007256)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** HCC (MESH:D006528), PVTT (MESH:D013927), Contralateral liver hypertrophy (MESH:D017093), Contralateral Hypertrophy (MESH:D006984)
- **Chemicals:** 90Y (MESH:C000615496)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11135002/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11135002