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Pathophysiological mechanisms of ALPPS: experimental model

Wang, Ruifeng; Quan, Zhen; Zheng, Tongsen; Wang, Kai; Liu, Yang; Han, Zhaoguo; Wang, Xiance; Ma, Shiling; Liu, Lianxin*; Lau, Wan Yee*; Sun, Xilin*
Science Citation Index Expanded
哈尔滨医科大学; 中国医学科学院; 1

摘要

Background: Associating liver partition and portal vein ligation for staged hepatectomy (ALPPS) is a two-stage strategy that may increase hepatic tumour resectability and reduce postoperative liver failure rate by inducing rapid hypertrophy of the future liver remnant (FLR). Pathophysiological mechanisms after the first stage of ALPPS are poorly understood. @@@ Methods: An ALPPS model was established in rabbits with liver VX2 tumour. The pathophysiological mechanisms after the first stage of ALPPS in the FLR and tumour were assessed by multiplexed positron emission tomography (PET) tracers, dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI (DCE-MRI) and histopathology. @@@ Results: Tumour volume in the ALPPS model differed from post-stage 1 ALPPS at day 14 compared to control animals. F-18-FDG uptake of tumour increased from day 7 onwards in the ALPPS model. Valid volumetric function measured by F-18-methylcholine PET showed good values in accurately monitoring dynamics and time window for functional liver regeneration (days 3 to 7). DCE-MRI revealed changes in the vascular hyperpermeability function, with a peak on day 7 for tumour and FLR. @@@ Conclusion: Molecular and functional imaging are promising non-invasive methods to investigate the pathophysiological mechanisms of ALPPS with potential for clinical application.

关键词

PORTAL-VEIN LIGATION ASSOCIATING LIVER PARTITION STAGED HEPATECTOMY HEPATOCELLULAR-CARCINOMA IN-VIVO REGENERATION CHOLINE EMBOLIZATION TRANSECTION PARAMETERS