Research Article Details

Article ID: A16165
PMID: 28528267
Source: HPB (Oxford)
Title: Using MRI to non-invasively and accurately quantify preoperative hepatic steatosis.
Abstract: BACKGROUND: The obesity epidemic has significantly increased the incidence and severity of hepatic steatosis in liver surgery patients and liver donors, potentially impacting postoperative liver regeneration and function. Development of a non-invasive means to quantify hepatic steatosis would facilitate selection of candidates for liver resection and transplant donation. METHODS: An IRB-approved protocol prospectively enrolled 28 patients with liver tumors requiring hepatic resection. In all patients, fast dual-echo gradient-echo MR images were acquired using 2-Point Dixon technique in 2D and 3D. The degree of steatosis was quantified by percent fat fraction (%FF) from in- and out-of-phase, and water-only and fat-only images. The technique-specific %FFs were compared to intraoperative and histopathological findings. RESULTS: For patients with >30% steatosis by histology, the mean %FF was 22% (SD&#160;&#177;&#160;5.2%) compared to a mean %FF of 5.0% (SD&#160;&#177;&#160;2.1%, p&#160;=&#160;0.0001) in patients with <30% steatosis. Using scaled values for the MR-calculated %FF, all patients with >30% pathologic steatosis could be identified preoperatively. CONCLUSIONS: Quantitative MRI identified patients with clinically-relevant steatosis with 100% accuracy. These findings could have significant impact on the management of liver resection patients and transplant donors.
DOI: 10.1016/j.hpb.2017.04.009