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2003:
Herfarth Klaus K; Hof Holger; Bahner Malte L; Lohr Frank; Höss Angelika; van Kaick Gerhard; Wannenmacher Michael; Debus Jürgen
Assessment of focal liver reaction by multiphasic CT after stereotactic single-dose radiotherapy of liver tumors.
International journal of radiation oncology, biology, physics 2003;
57(
2):.
PURPOSE: To characterize and quantitatively assess focal radiation reactions in the liver after stereotactic single-dose radiotherapy for liver malignancies. METHODS AND MATERIALS: A total of 131 multiphasic CT scans were performed in 36 patients before and after stereotactic radiotherapy for liver tumors. The examination protocol included a nonenhanced scan and contrast-enhanced scans at different times after contrast injection. The volume of the reaction was determined in each scan and the threshold dose calculated using the dose-volume histogram of the treatment plan. RESULTS: Every patient showed a focal radiation reaction on at least one follow-up examination. In 74% of the posttherapeutic scans, a sharply demarcated hypodense area surrounded the treated tumor in the nonenhanced scans. The reaction occurred at a median of 1.8 months (range 1.2-4.6) after radiotherapy. The median threshold dose was 13.7 Gy (range 8.9-19.2). The threshold dose strongly correlated with the time of detection after therapy (r = 0.7). Radiologically, three reaction types were found on the enhanced scans: type 1, portal-venous phase: hypodense and late phase: isodense; type 2, portal-venous phase: hypodense and late phase: hyperdense; and type 3, portal-venous phase: isodense/hyperdense and late phase: hyperdense. Type 1 or 2 reactions were observed significantly earlier than type 3 (p <0.05). The median threshold dose for type 1 or 2 reactions was significantly lower than for type 3 (p <0.05). The reaction volume decreased with longer follow-up (2-4 months: median 40% of initial volume). The reaction types shifted with follow-up: 58% were of type 1 at the initial manifestation and 58% were of type 3 at the next examination thereafter. CONCLUSION: A focal radiation reaction occurs after stereotactic single-dose therapy in the liver. The volume of the reaction decreases and changes its radiologic appearance during follow-up. This reaction has to be differentiated from recurrent tumor.
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