The aims of this study were to evaluate the safety, feasibility and tumour response of irreversible electroporation, a non-thermal ablation technique, for the treatment of unresectable hepatocellular carcinoma. The endpoints were safety and local treatment efficacy.Patients with unresectable tumours and tumours not amenable for radiofrequency ablation because of their vicinity to organs vulnerable to thermal damage such as the bowel or because they were close to large blood vessels that would limit efficacy of ablation due to the heat sink effect were treated with irreversible electroporation using percutaneous ultrasound and/or computed tomography guided electrode placement between November 2008 and December 2009. Early, late, minor and major complications were recorded. Tumour response was determined on triphasic helical computed tomography follow-up at one month, then every three months post-procedure. Eleven patients received IRE therapy to 18 HCC lesions (Mean diameter 2.44 6 0.99 cm; range 1.0-6.1 cm) with five patients having more than one treated HCC. Mean follow-up was 18 months (range 14-24 months). Six patients required repeat treatments for local residual or recurrent disease; two of these also had IRE for distant intrahepatic recurrence. No serious complications were observed despite seven lesions lying adjacent to important structures or organs. Four patients developed transient urinary retention and seven developed transient local post-procedure pain. After IRE therapy, 13 (72%) lesions were completely ablated with 93% success for lesions 3 cm (13/14). The local recurrence-free period was 18 6 4 months and the distance recurrence free period was 14 6 6 months. These preliminary results suggest that IRE is a safe and feasible technique for local ablation of HCC, particularly for lesions less than 3 cm. No major complications were encountered during this study even for tumours close to essential structures or organs.
While SR is superior to RFA for the management of early stage BCLC A disease with ≤5 cm HCC, both appear effective as first-line treatment options for Western patients with small ≤3 cm tumors. Although safer than SR, RFA is associated with higher rates of tumor recurrence and local disease progression. Further prospective randomized controlled trials are warranted to compare these two modalities.
CFDS is useful in the management of AIT because CFDS 0 correlates better with prednisolone response (58%) than CFDS I-III (14%). However, unlike experience in iodine-deficient regions, the results of the present study revealed that treatment responses to thionamide or prednisolone were heterogeneous within uniform CFDS patterns. Thus, prednisolone--responsiveness was not consistently predicted by CFDS 0, but the presence of flow appeared to correlate with non-response to prednisolone.
This work describes an accurate and robust method for the tracking of points of interest within 2D ultrasound data, based on a combination of multi-template matching, dense optical flow and relative image intensity information.
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