Microinvasion in hepatocellular carcinoma: predictive factor and application for definition of clinical target volume for radiotherapy
Male
Adult
Liver Cirrhosis
Carcinoma, Hepatocellular
RD1-811
Hepatocellular carcinoma
Microinvasion
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Clinicopathologic correlation
Humans
Hepatectomy
Neoplasm Invasiveness
RC254-282
Aged
Retrospective Studies
Radiotherapy
Research
Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted
Liver Neoplasms
Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens
Middle Aged
Prognosis
Tumor Burden
Clinical target volume
Surgery
Female
Follow-Up Studies
DOI:
10.1186/s12957-024-03399-1
Publication Date:
2024-05-08T10:02:16Z
AUTHORS (10)
ABSTRACT
Abstract
Background
To investigate the correlation between microinvasion and various features of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), and to clarify the microinvasion distance from visible HCC lesions to subclinical lesions, so as to provide clinical basis for the expandable boundary of clinical target volume (CTV) from gross tumor volume (GTV) in the radiotherapy of HCC.
Methods
HCC patients underwent hepatectomy of liver cancer in our hospital between July 2019 and November 2021 were enrolled. Data on various features and tumor microinvasion distance were collected. The distribution characteristics of microinvasion distance were analyzed to investigate its potential correlation with various features. Tumor size compared between radiographic and pathologic samples was analyzed to clarify the application of pathologic microinvasion to identify subclinical lesions of radiographic imaging.
Results
The average microinvasion distance was 0.6 mm, with 95% patients exhibiting microinvasion distance less than 3.0 mm, and the maximum microinvasion distance was 4.0 mm. A significant correlation was found between microinvasion and liver cirrhosis (P = 0.036), serum albumin level (P = 0.049). Multivariate logistic regression analysis revealed that HCC patients with cirrhosis had a significantly lower risk of microinvasion (OR = 0.09, 95%CI = 0.02 ~ 0.50, P = 0.006). Tumor size was overestimated by 1.6 mm (95%CI=-12.8 ~ 16.0 mm) on radiographic size compared to pathologic size, with a mean %Δsize of 2.96% (95%CI=-0.57%~6.50%). The %Δsize ranged from − 29.03% to 34.78%.
Conclusions
CTV expanding by 5.4 mm from radiographic GTV could include all pathologic microinvasive lesions in the radiotherapy of HCC. Liver cirrhosis was correlated with microinvasion and were independent predictive factor of microinvasion in HCC.
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CITATIONS (1)
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