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Long-term follow-up of liver alveolar echinococcosis using echinococcosis multilocularis ultrasound classification

Jasmin Schuhbaur, Melissa Schweizer, Jana Philipp, Julian Schmidberger, Patrycja Schlingeloff, Wolfgang Kratzer

2021World Journal of Gastroenterology17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: infects humans as a false intermediate host, alveolar echinococcosis (AE) usually manifests primarily intrahepatically and is initially asymptomatic. If the disease remains undiagnosed and untreated, progressive growth occurs, reminiscent of malignant tumours. The only curative therapy is complete resection, which is limited to localised stages, and palliative drug therapy is used otherwise. Consequently, early diagnosis and reliable detection of AE lesions are important. For this reason, abdominal ultrasonography, as the most common primary imaging for AE, relies on classification systems. AIM: To investigate how hepatic AE lesion sonomorphology changes over time in the Echinococcosis Multilocularis Ulm Classification (EMUC)-ultrasound (US) classification. METHODS: values < 0.05 were considered statistically significant. RESULTS: The preliminary study included 59 patients, 38 (64.5%) women and 21 (35.6%) men. The mean age at initial diagnosis was 59.9 ± 16.9 years. At the time of initial ultrasonography, a hailstorm pattern was present in 42.4% (25/59) of cases, a hemangioma-like pattern in 16.9% (10/59), a pseudocystic pattern in 15.3% (9/59), and a metastasis-like pattern in 25.4% (15/59). For the hailstorm pattern, the average lesion size was 67.4 ± 26.3 mm. The average lesion size was 113.7 ± 40.8 mm with the pseudocystic pattern and 83.5 ± 27.3 mm with the hemangioma-like pattern. An average lesion size of 21.7 ± 11.0 mm was determined for the metastasis-like pattern. Although the sonomorphologic pattern remained unchanged in 84.7% (50/59) of AE reference lesions, 15.3% (9/59) showed a change over time. A change in pattern was seen exclusively for AE lesions initially classified as hemangioma-like or pseudocystic. A total of 70% (7/10) of AE lesions initially classified as hemangioma-like showed a relevant change in pattern over time, and 85.7% (6/7) of these were secondarily classified as having a hailstorm pattern, with the remainder (1/7; 14.3%) classified as having a pseudocystic pattern. A total of 22.2% (2/9) of AE lesions initially classified as pseudocystic showed a relevant change in pattern over time and were classified as having a hailstorm pattern. For AE lesions initially classified as having a hailstorm or metastatic pattern, no pattern change was evident. All patients with pattern change were on continuous drug therapy with albendazole. CONCLUSION: The sonomorphology of hepatic AE lesions may change over time. The hemangioma-like and pseudocystic patterns are affected.

Topics & Concepts

Echinococcus multilocularisEchinococcosisAlveolar echinococcosisMedicineAsymptomaticLesionRadiologyPathologyParasitic infections in humans and animalsAmoebic Infections and TreatmentsParasitic Infections and Diagnostics
Long-term follow-up of liver alveolar echinococcosis using echinococcosis multilocularis ultrasound classification | Litcius