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Fibrolamellar hepatocellular carcinoma: imaging and pathologic findings in 31 recent cases.
Radiology 1999 November
PURPOSE: To review characteristic findings of fibrolamellar hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) at computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance (MR) imaging.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: The authors retrospectively reviewed the clinical, pathologic, and preoperative imaging findings in 31 patients with histologically proved fibrolamellar HCC. Dynamic contrast material-enhanced CT of the liver was performed in 31 patients, helical multiphase CT in 21, and MR imaging in 11. Complete resection was performed in 17 patients, and imaging-pathologic correlation was performed.
RESULTS: Large tumors (mean diameter, 13 cm) were depicted at CT and MR in all cases. At CT, the margins of the tumors were well defined in 24 (77%) of 31 cases calcifications were depicted in 21 (68%), a central scar in 22 (71%), and abdominal lymphadenopathy in 20 (65%). In 20 (80%) of 25 cases with hepatic arterial phase CT images, all tumors were heterogeneous and depicted areas of hypervascularity. At MR imaging, tumors were hypointense to liver on T1-weighted images (n = 11) and hyperintense to liver on T2-weighted images (n = 10). Calcification was not depicted on MR images, but a central scar was depicted as hypointense to surrounding tumor in nine cases.
CONCLUSION: CT and MR images demonstrate characteristic features that may allow confident diagnosis of fibrolamellar HCC.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: The authors retrospectively reviewed the clinical, pathologic, and preoperative imaging findings in 31 patients with histologically proved fibrolamellar HCC. Dynamic contrast material-enhanced CT of the liver was performed in 31 patients, helical multiphase CT in 21, and MR imaging in 11. Complete resection was performed in 17 patients, and imaging-pathologic correlation was performed.
RESULTS: Large tumors (mean diameter, 13 cm) were depicted at CT and MR in all cases. At CT, the margins of the tumors were well defined in 24 (77%) of 31 cases calcifications were depicted in 21 (68%), a central scar in 22 (71%), and abdominal lymphadenopathy in 20 (65%). In 20 (80%) of 25 cases with hepatic arterial phase CT images, all tumors were heterogeneous and depicted areas of hypervascularity. At MR imaging, tumors were hypointense to liver on T1-weighted images (n = 11) and hyperintense to liver on T2-weighted images (n = 10). Calcification was not depicted on MR images, but a central scar was depicted as hypointense to surrounding tumor in nine cases.
CONCLUSION: CT and MR images demonstrate characteristic features that may allow confident diagnosis of fibrolamellar HCC.
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