To identify whether arterial enhancement pattern at MRI could predict the prognosis after surgical resection of intrahepatic mass-forming cholangiocarcinoma (IMCC). Materials and Methods: Patients who underwent curative hepatic resection and preoperative MRI for IMCC from November 2007 to September 2016 were retrospectively evaluated. MRI enhancement pattern was classified by two radiologists. Recurrence and death data were retrieved until September 31, 2017. Prognostic factor analysis was performed by using preoperative and postoperative clinical-pathologic factors, as well as imaging findings. Results: Data in 134 patients (median age, 63.0 years; 87 men and 47 women) were evaluated; median tumor size was 4.5 cm. Arterial phase MRI showed diffuse hypoenhancement in 33 patients, peripheral rim enhancement in 81 patients, and diffuse hyperenhancement in 20 patients. The 5-year risk of death in patients with IMCC with diffuse hyperenhancement was lower than that of patients with diffuse hypoenhancement or peripheral rim enhancement (5-year risk of death: 5.9% vs 87.9% vs 59.2%). Diffuse hypoenhancement (hazard ratio [HR], 41; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 5, 312; P , .01) and peripheral rim enhancement (HR, 11; 95% CI: 2, 85; P = .02) were associated with an increased risk of death compared with diffuse hyperenhancement. Patients with diffuse hyperenhancement of IMCCs had more frequent chronic liver disease (13 of 20; 65%), less frequent vascular invasion (six of 20; 30%), and less frequent tumor necrosis (three of 20; 15%) than other enhancement group (P , .05 for all). Conclusion: The MRI arterial enhancement pattern was a prognostic marker in the preoperative evaluation of patients with resectable intrahepatic mass-forming cholangiocarcinoma.
We intraindividually compared the efficacy of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) with extracellular contrast agents (ECA-MRI) and MRI with hepatobiliary agents (HBA-MRI) for the diagnosis of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) using the Liver Imaging Reporting and Data System (LI-RADS). Between November 2016 and November 2017, we enrolled 91 patients with chronic liver disease who underwent both ECA-MRI and HBA-MRI within a 1-month interval for a first detected hepatic nodule on ultrasound. In total, 117 observations (95 HCCs, 19 benign lesions, and 3 other malignancies; median size, 18 mm) were identified with surgical resection. Two observers assessed two MRIs based on LI-RADS v2017, with consensus by a third observer. We then compared the diagnostic performance of LR-5 according to LI-RADS and modified LI-RADS. ECA-MRI had higher sensitivity (77.9% versus 66.3%) and accuracy (82.1% versus 72.6%) than HBA-MRI in the LR-5 category (P < 0.001). When applying either modified washout on the portal venous phase (PVP)/transitional phase (TP) of HBA-MRI or isointensity with a capsule during the PVP/delayed phase of ECA-MRI (illusional washout), 13 HCCs on HBA-MRI and 11 HCCs on ECA-MRI were correctly classified as HCC, while achieving 100% specificity. One cholangiocarcinoma was accurately classified only with HBA-MRI due to its targetoid appearance in the TP and hepatobiliary phase. Conclusion: ECA-MRI showed better sensitivity and accuracy than HBA-MRI for the diagnosis of HCC with LI-RADS. We achieved better diagnostic performance when applying a modified washout on PVP/TP HBA-MRI and an illusional washout on ECA-MRI than we did with conventional criteria.
Sustained elevation of serum TSH levels during active surveillance is associated with PTMC progression. Maintaining a low-normal TSH range with levothyroxine treatment during active surveillance of PTMC might be considered in future studies.
Infestation by the biotrophic pathogen Gymnosporangium asiaticum can be devastating for plant of the family Rosaceae. However, the phytopathology of this process has not been thoroughly elucidated. Using a metabolomics approach, we discovered the intrinsic activities that induce disease symptoms after fungal invasion in terms of microbe-induced metabolic responses. Through metabolic pathway enrichment and mapping, we found that the host altered its metabolite levels, resulting in accumulation of tetrose and pentose sugar alcohols, in response to this fungus. We then used a multiple linear regression model to evaluate the effect of the interaction between this abnormal accumulation of sugar alcohol and the group variable (control/parasitism). The results revealed that this accumulation resulted in deficiency in the supply of specific sugars, which led to a lack of amino sugar and nucleotide sugar metabolism. Halting this metabolism could hamper pivotal functions in the plant host, including cell wall synthesis and lesion repair. In conclusion, our findings indicate that altered metabolic responses that occur during fungal parasitism can cause deficiency in substrates in pivotal pathways and thereby trigger pathological symptoms.
This study investigated the changes in the major etiologic organisms and clinical phenotypes of nontuberculous mycobacterial lung disease (NTM-LD) over a recent 15-year period in Korea. The increase of number of patients with NTM-LD was primarily due to an increase of Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) lung disease (LD). Among MAC cases, the proportion of M. avium increased compared with M. intracellulare, whereas the incidence of M. abscessus complex and M. kansasii LD remained relatively stable. The proportion of cases of the nodular bronchiectatic form increased compared with the fibrocavitary form of NTM-LD.
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