Unique Morphologic Findings in the Liver After Stereotactic Radiation for Cholangiocarcinoma.

The American journal of surgical pathology(2023)

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摘要
Newer radiotherapy techniques, such as stereotactic body radiation, have been increasingly used as part of the treatment of cholangiocarcinomas, particularly as a bridge to liver transplantation. Although conformal, these high-dose therapies result in tissue injury in the peritumoral liver tissue. This retrospective study characterized the morphologic changes in the liver after stereotactic body radiation in a series of liver explant specimens with perihilar cholangiocarcinoma. The morphologic changes in the irradiated zone were compared against the nonirradiated background liver parenchyma to control for chemotherapy-related changes. Of the 21 cases studied, 16 patients (76.2%) had underlying primary sclerosing cholangitis, and 13 patients (61.9%) had advanced liver fibrosis. The average duration between completion of radiotherapy and liver transplantation was 33.4 weeks (range: 6.29 to 67.7). Twelve patients (57.1%) had no residual tumor in the liver. The most frequent histologic changes in the peritumoral irradiated liver tissue were sinusoidal congestion (100%), sinusoidal edematous stroma (100%), and hepatocellular atrophy (100%), followed by partial/complete occlusion of central veins (76.2%), sinusoidal cellular infiltrates (76.2%), and hepatocyte dropout (66.7%). The findings in the radiated areas were more extensive than in the background liver (P<0.01). Sinusoidal edematous stroma was striking and dominated the histologic findings in some cases. Over time, there was less sinusoidal congestion but more hepatocyte dropout (rs=-0.54, P=0.012 and rs=0.64, P=0.002, respectively). Uncommon findings, such as foam cell arteriopathy in the liver hilum, were also observed. In summary, postradiation liver specimens have distinctive morphologic findings.
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stereotactic radiation,liver,unique morphologic findings
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