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Portal vein embolization, biembolization, and liver venous deprivation

Dear editor

We read with great interest the article “Liver venous deprivation prior to hepatectomy: an interventional radiology procedure”, authored by Alves et al.(11 Alves VPV, Azevedo A, Araujo DA, et al. Liver venous deprivation prior to hepatectomy: an interventional radiology procedure. Radiol Bras. 2021;54:62-3.), in a recent issue of Radiologia Brasileira. This is an excellent addition to the “Advances in Radiology” section of the journal, which highlights the latest developments in medical practice in Brazil. Liver regeneration prior to major hepatectomy is decisive in cancer management because it allows these potentially curative surgical procedures to be performed in otherwise inoperable patients, thus improving survival outcomes(22 Giglio MC, Giakoustidis A, Draz A, et al. Oncological outcomes of major liver resection following portal vein embolization: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Ann Surg Oncol. 2016;23:3709-17.). Portal vein embolization (PVE), used for decades as a method of inducing liver hypertrophy(33 Luz JHM, Gomes FV, Coimbra E, et al. Preoperative portal vein embolization in hepatic surgery: a review about the embolic materials and their effects on liver regeneration and outcome. Radiol Res Pract. 2020;2020:9295852.), has recently been used in combination with embolization of one or more hepatic veins(44 Guiu B, Chevallier P, Denys A, et al. Simultaneous trans-hepatic portal and hepatic vein embolization before major hepatectomy: the liver venous deprivation technique. Eur Radiol. 2016;26:4259-67.).

Alves et al.(11 Alves VPV, Azevedo A, Araujo DA, et al. Liver venous deprivation prior to hepatectomy: an interventional radiology procedure. Radiol Bras. 2021;54:62-3.) described concomitant PVE and proximal right hepatic vein embolization with a vascular plug. This technique might be more appropriately designated biembolization(55 Le Roy B, Perrey A, Fontarensky M, et al. Combined preoperative portal and hepatic vein embolization (biembolization) to improve liver regeneration before major liver resection: a preliminary report. World J Surg. 2017;41:1848-56.), being slightly different from liver venous deprivation (LVD). The LVD procedure has been described as: PVE plus proximal and distal embolization of the hepatic veins. Proximal embolization of the hepatic vein is accomplished with a vascular plug, as in biembolization, whereas distal embolization of the hepatic vein is achieved with N-butyl-cyanoacrylate (NBCA) plus lipiodol, as in LVD(22 Giglio MC, Giakoustidis A, Draz A, et al. Oncological outcomes of major liver resection following portal vein embolization: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Ann Surg Oncol. 2016;23:3709-17.). Why might this be relevant? Invariably, venovenous collaterals between liver segments V/VIII and IV are present(66 Gai YH, Cai SF, Guo WB, et al. Sonographic classification of draining pathways of obstructed hepatic veins in Budd-Chiari syndrome. J Clin Ultrasound. 2014;42:134-42.) and will increase in size after plug deployment(44 Guiu B, Chevallier P, Denys A, et al. Simultaneous trans-hepatic portal and hepatic vein embolization before major hepatectomy: the liver venous deprivation technique. Eur Radiol. 2016;26:4259-67.). Distal embolization with a liquid embolic agent (i.e., NBCA) not only eliminates flow in the target vein but also occludes those collaterals, which might have benefits in terms of liver hypertrophy induction. In addition, biembolization and LVD may require different technical approaches: LVD is usually performed through a percutaneous trans-hepatic approach(44 Guiu B, Chevallier P, Denys A, et al. Simultaneous trans-hepatic portal and hepatic vein embolization before major hepatectomy: the liver venous deprivation technique. Eur Radiol. 2016;26:4259-67.,77 Panaro F, Giannone F, Riviere B, et al. Perioperative impact of liver venous deprivation compared with portal venous embolization in patients undergoing right hepatectomy: preliminary results from the pioneer center. Hepatobiliary Surg Nutr. 2019;8:329-37.), making it easier to inject liquid embolic agents after plug deployment, whereas biembolization is performed through a transjugular approach (Figure 1).

Figure 1
Fluoroscopic image (1A) obtained immediately after LVD and contrastenhanced coronal CT (1B) obtained 14 days after LVD. Note the vascular plug (red arrows) placed in the right hepatic vein for proximal embolization and NBCA plus lipiodol occluding the distal branches (yellow arrows). Note also NBCA plus lipiodol occluding a venovenous collateral (green arrows) and right portal vein embolization with NBCA plus lipiodol (white arrow).

Segment IV PVE, which was performed by Alves et al.(11 Alves VPV, Azevedo A, Araujo DA, et al. Liver venous deprivation prior to hepatectomy: an interventional radiology procedure. Radiol Bras. 2021;54:62-3.), has been reported to induce additional liver hypertrophy(88 Kishi I, Madoff DC, Abdalla EK, et al. Is embolization of segment 4 portal veins before extended right hepatectomy justified? Surgery. 2008;144:744-51.). However, segment IV embolization is controversial: the segment IV portal branches are usually numerous and tiny, which increases the procedure time and the degree of technical difficulty; liquid embolic agents are trickier to use, because any reflux would cause nontarget embolization of liver segments II and III; due to the degree of technical difficulty, suboptimal embolization of segment IV might be an issue(99 de Baere T, Teriitehau C, Deschamps F, et al. Predictive factors for hypertrophy of the future remnant liver after selective portal vein embolization. Ann Surg Oncol. 2010;17:2081-9.); and segment IV is the main territory for systemic-portal venous shunts, possibly decreasing the efficacy of the procedure(1010 Breen DJ, Rutherford EE, Stedman B, et al. Intrahepatic arterioportal shunting and anomalous venous drainage: understanding the CT features in the liver. Eur Radiol. 2004;14:2249-60.). To overcome the limitations of PVE of segment IV, a more aggressive form of LVD has been proposed-extended LVD(1111 Guiu B, Quenet F, Escal L, et al. Extended liver venous deprivation before major hepatectomy induces marked and very rapid increase in future liver remnant function. Eur Radiol. 2017;27:3343-52.)-which consists of LVD plus middle hepatic vein embolization. Extended LVD has been shown to be safe and highly effective, promoting an unparalleled 53.4% increase in liver volume within only seven days(1111 Guiu B, Quenet F, Escal L, et al. Extended liver venous deprivation before major hepatectomy induces marked and very rapid increase in future liver remnant function. Eur Radiol. 2017;27:3343-52.).

Future studies focusing on patient selection are needed. When and how to choose from such a variety of interventional tools? How to best predict post-hepatectomy liver failure? How can we choose between volumetric computed tomography and liver function studies (e.g., 99mTc-mebrofenin hepatobiliary scintigraphy, gadoxetic acid-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging, and indocyanine green retention test)-or should we perform both? Most importantly, when is the liver ready for major surgery? How can we safely accelerate this preoperative process? Answering such questions are the reason for having multidisciplinary team meetings that allow personalized medical care, with input from different medical perspectives. We want to congratulate the authors not only for obtaining a regenerative outcome that allowed successful major hepatectomy within 41 days after embolization but also for highlighting the potential role and advantages of LVD versus PVE, providing grounds to expand future studies in this field(1212 Luz JHM, Gomes FG, Costa NV, et al. BestFRL trial: liver regeneration at CT before major hepatectomies for liver cancer-a randomized controlled trial comparing portal vein embolization with N-butyl-cyanoacrilate plus iodized oil versus polyvinyl alcohol particles plus coils. Radiology. 2021 April 6;204055. Online ahead of print.).

REFERENCES

  • 1
    Alves VPV, Azevedo A, Araujo DA, et al. Liver venous deprivation prior to hepatectomy: an interventional radiology procedure. Radiol Bras. 2021;54:62-3.
  • 2
    Giglio MC, Giakoustidis A, Draz A, et al. Oncological outcomes of major liver resection following portal vein embolization: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Ann Surg Oncol. 2016;23:3709-17.
  • 3
    Luz JHM, Gomes FV, Coimbra E, et al. Preoperative portal vein embolization in hepatic surgery: a review about the embolic materials and their effects on liver regeneration and outcome. Radiol Res Pract. 2020;2020:9295852.
  • 4
    Guiu B, Chevallier P, Denys A, et al. Simultaneous trans-hepatic portal and hepatic vein embolization before major hepatectomy: the liver venous deprivation technique. Eur Radiol. 2016;26:4259-67.
  • 5
    Le Roy B, Perrey A, Fontarensky M, et al. Combined preoperative portal and hepatic vein embolization (biembolization) to improve liver regeneration before major liver resection: a preliminary report. World J Surg. 2017;41:1848-56.
  • 6
    Gai YH, Cai SF, Guo WB, et al. Sonographic classification of draining pathways of obstructed hepatic veins in Budd-Chiari syndrome. J Clin Ultrasound. 2014;42:134-42.
  • 7
    Panaro F, Giannone F, Riviere B, et al. Perioperative impact of liver venous deprivation compared with portal venous embolization in patients undergoing right hepatectomy: preliminary results from the pioneer center. Hepatobiliary Surg Nutr. 2019;8:329-37.
  • 8
    Kishi I, Madoff DC, Abdalla EK, et al. Is embolization of segment 4 portal veins before extended right hepatectomy justified? Surgery. 2008;144:744-51.
  • 9
    de Baere T, Teriitehau C, Deschamps F, et al. Predictive factors for hypertrophy of the future remnant liver after selective portal vein embolization. Ann Surg Oncol. 2010;17:2081-9.
  • 10
    Breen DJ, Rutherford EE, Stedman B, et al. Intrahepatic arterioportal shunting and anomalous venous drainage: understanding the CT features in the liver. Eur Radiol. 2004;14:2249-60.
  • 11
    Guiu B, Quenet F, Escal L, et al. Extended liver venous deprivation before major hepatectomy induces marked and very rapid increase in future liver remnant function. Eur Radiol. 2017;27:3343-52.
  • 12
    Luz JHM, Gomes FG, Costa NV, et al. BestFRL trial: liver regeneration at CT before major hepatectomies for liver cancer-a randomized controlled trial comparing portal vein embolization with N-butyl-cyanoacrilate plus iodized oil versus polyvinyl alcohol particles plus coils. Radiology. 2021 April 6;204055. Online ahead of print.

Reply

Authorship SCIMAGO INSTITUTIONS RANKINGS

We received with great enthusiasm the Letter to the Editor “Portal vein embolization, biembolization, and liver venous deprivation”, authored by Dr. Luz and Dr. Bilhim. We certainly agree that the precise nomenclature for the procedure described in our paper should be “Portal vein embolization with hepatic vein biembolization”. The added technique of distal embolization of the hepatic veins, described in liver venous deprivation, would likely represent further liver hypertrophy and probably better hepatic functionality than those achieved in the case we described. Our group has now standardized liver venous deprivation with a transhepatic approach as the technique of choice in such cases. In regard to the issue of hepatic segment IV embolization, we are of the same opinion (that it presents a technical challenge to the PVE procedure), and extended LVD with middle hepatic vein, rather than segment IV embolization, is now the preferred method in our department. Nevertheless, the theme of combined PVE and LVD (or biembolization) raises multiple questions and concerns, which will likely be addressed by prospective multicenter studies and collaborative multidisciplinary discussions to optimize medical care for the affected patients. We want to thank the authors for their interest in our paper, as well as for the perfectly highlighted issues, which further elevate the level of scientific debate in the area of interventional radiology.

Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    24 May 2021
  • Date of issue
    May-Jun 2021
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