1.Diagnosis and differential diagnosis of small hepatocellular carcinoma in the context of cirrhosis
Li CHEN ; Shengwei LU ; Tiandan XIANG ; Yixing YU ; Weifeng ZHAO
Chinese Journal of Hepatology 2025;33(4):323-328
In China, most patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) have progressed to the middle and advanced stages when they are diagnosed, so early-stage diagnosis is a significant key to improving the prognosis. Tumor diameter significantly correlates with the prognosis of patients with small hepatocellular carcinoma (sHCC), which is further classified as early-stage HCC (eHCC) and advanced HCC (pHCC). The "fast in and fast out" enhancement pattern is a typical feature of liver cancer imaging (CECT/CEMRI/CEUS); yet, eHCC with a diameter of <2 cm frequently exhibits hypovascularity. Hepatocyte-specific enhanced MRI (EOB-MRI) displays a unique hepatobiliary-specific phase (HBP) hypointensity, along with atypical manifestations such as lipid-containing nodules, T2 hyperintensity, and restricted diffusion. HBP is a functional radiographic imaging feature for cancerous nodules in cirrhosis. EOB-MRI can significantly increase the hypovascularity detection rate of eHCC in conjunction with serologic markers like alpha-fetoprotein. With a focus on the dynamic changes in hypovascular hypointense nodules in HBP (including diameter size, APHE, DWI, and other parameters), it is recommended that high-risk cirrhotic cohorts undergo routine monitoring (EOB-MRI follow-up every three months) to diagnose early-stage eHCC, based on the existing evidence-based medicine. This recommendation in clinical practice guidelines provides a crucial strategy that can markedly enhance patients' five-year survival rates.
2.Diagnosis and differential diagnosis of small hepatocellular carcinoma in the context of cirrhosis
Li CHEN ; Shengwei LU ; Tiandan XIANG ; Yixing YU ; Weifeng ZHAO
Chinese Journal of Hepatology 2025;33(4):323-328
In China, most patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) have progressed to the middle and advanced stages when they are diagnosed, so early-stage diagnosis is a significant key to improving the prognosis. Tumor diameter significantly correlates with the prognosis of patients with small hepatocellular carcinoma (sHCC), which is further classified as early-stage HCC (eHCC) and advanced HCC (pHCC). The "fast in and fast out" enhancement pattern is a typical feature of liver cancer imaging (CECT/CEMRI/CEUS); yet, eHCC with a diameter of <2 cm frequently exhibits hypovascularity. Hepatocyte-specific enhanced MRI (EOB-MRI) displays a unique hepatobiliary-specific phase (HBP) hypointensity, along with atypical manifestations such as lipid-containing nodules, T2 hyperintensity, and restricted diffusion. HBP is a functional radiographic imaging feature for cancerous nodules in cirrhosis. EOB-MRI can significantly increase the hypovascularity detection rate of eHCC in conjunction with serologic markers like alpha-fetoprotein. With a focus on the dynamic changes in hypovascular hypointense nodules in HBP (including diameter size, APHE, DWI, and other parameters), it is recommended that high-risk cirrhotic cohorts undergo routine monitoring (EOB-MRI follow-up every three months) to diagnose early-stage eHCC, based on the existing evidence-based medicine. This recommendation in clinical practice guidelines provides a crucial strategy that can markedly enhance patients' five-year survival rates.
3.Successful treatment of CD 19 targeted chimeric antigen receptor T cells in 2 children with isolated testicular recurrence of acute B lymphoblastic leukemia and literature review
Qiyu YANG ; Jun LU ; Zong ZHAI ; Guanghua CHEN ; Shaoyan HU ; Ye LU ; Tiandan LI ; Mengmeng DING ; Yi WANG
Chinese Journal of Applied Clinical Pediatrics 2022;37(5):382-385
This study reports the diagnosis and treatment of 2 children with isolated testicular recurrence (ITR) of acute B lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL) treated with CD 19 targeted chimeric antigen receptor T (CD 19 CAR-T) cells in May and December 2019 in the Department of Hematology and Oncology, Children′s Hospital of Soochow University, and explores the efficacy of CD 19 CAR-T cells therapy versus conventional radiotherapy and chemotherapy through literature review.Both cases were diagnosed as B-ALL by the morphologic, immunologic, cytogenetic and molecular biology methods.ITR was diagnosed by testicular biopsy at 60 months and 38 months after initial diagnosis in 2 cases, respectively.After infusion of CD 19 CAR-T cells at 7.0×10 6/kg and 1.5×10 7/kg, respectively for 7-10 days, testicular leukemia cell infiltration disappeared and complete remission was obtained.Among them, case 2 developed cytokine release syndrome and immune effector cell-related neurotoxicity syndrome after treatment, which was improved after drug intervention.It is suggested that CD 19 CAR-T cells are effective in the treatment of ITR in children, which may be an alternative to orchiectomy or local radiotherapy for ITR in children with B-ALL.

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