» Articles » PMID: 20133156

Utility of C-arm CT in Patients with Hepatocellular Carcinoma Undergoing Transhepatic Arterial Chemoembolization

Overview
Date 2010 Feb 6
PMID 20133156
Citations 35
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Purpose: To evaluate the utility of C-arm computed tomography (CT) on treatment algorithms in patients undergoing transhepatic arterial chemoembolization for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC).

Materials And Methods: From March 2008 to July 2008, 84 consecutive patients with HCC underwent 100 consecutive transhepatic arterial chemoembolizations with iodized oil. Unenhanced and iodinated contrast medium-enhanced C-arm CT with planar and three-dimensional imaging were performed in addition to conventional digital subtraction angiography (DSA) in all patients. The effect on diagnosis and treatment was determined by testing the hypotheses that C-arm CT, in comparison to DSA, provides (a) improved lesion detection, (b) expedient identification and mapping of arterial supply to a tumor, (c) improved characterization of a lesion to allow confident differentiation of HCC from pseudolesions such as arterioportal shunts, and (d) an improved evaluation of treatment completeness. The effect of C-arm CT was analyzed on the basis of information provided with C-arm CT that was not provided or readily apparent at DSA.

Results: C-arm CT was technically successful in 93 of the 100 procedures (93%). C-arm CT provided information not apparent or discernible at DSA in 30 of the 84 patients (36%) and resulted in a change in diagnosis, treatment planning, or treatment delivery in 24 (28%). The additional information included, amongst others, visualization of additional or angiographically occult tumors in 13 of the 84 patients (15%) and identification of incomplete treatment in six (7.1%).

Conclusions: C-arm CT is a useful collaborative tool in patients undergoing transhepatic arterial chemoembolization and can affect patient care in more than one-fourth of patients.

Citing Articles

Accurate image reconstruction within and beyond the field-of-view of CT system from data with truncation.

Zhang Z, Chen B, Xia D, Sidky E, Pan X Phys Med Biol. 2025; 70(3).

PMID: 39778342 PMC: 11770399. DOI: 10.1088/1361-6560/ada7be.


Application of Cone-beam Computed Tomography in Interventional Therapies for Liver Malignancy: A Consensus Statement by the Chinese College of Interventionalists.

Zhong B, Jia Z, Zhang W, Liu C, Ying S, Yan Z J Clin Transl Hepatol. 2024; 12(10):886-891.

PMID: 39440218 PMC: 11491508. DOI: 10.14218/JCTH.2024.00213.


Vessel-targeted compensation of deformable motion in interventional cone-beam CT.

Lu A, Huang H, Hu Y, Zbijewski W, Unberath M, Siewerdsen J Med Image Anal. 2024; 97:103254.

PMID: 38968908 PMC: 11365791. DOI: 10.1016/j.media.2024.103254.


Deformable motion compensation in interventional cone-beam CT with a context-aware learned autofocus metric.

Huang H, Liu Y, Siewerdsen J, Lu A, Hu Y, Zbijewski W Med Phys. 2024; 51(6):4158-4180.

PMID: 38733602 PMC: 11155121. DOI: 10.1002/mp.17125.


Deformable Motion Compensation for Intraprocedural Vascular Cone-beam CT with Sequential Projection Domain Targeting and Vessel-Enhancing Autofocus.

Lu A, Huang H, Hu Y, Zbijewski W, Unberath M, Siewerdsen J Proc SPIE Int Soc Opt Eng. 2023; 12466.

PMID: 37937266 PMC: 10629230. DOI: 10.1117/12.2652137.