Hepatic Metastases and Lymphoma


KEY FACTS

Imaging

  • Multiphasic CT or MR are 1st-line tests

  • Accuracy: Helical CT (~ 80%), MR and PET (~ 90%)

  • Hepatic lymphoma

    • Diffuse low density on CT may mimic steatosis

      • Easily distinguished from steatosis on MR

    • Multiple well-defined, homogeneous, low-density (CECT) or high-intensity (T2WI) masses

  • Liver metastases

    • Hypovascular metastases: Low-density center with peripheral rim or target-like enhancement

    • Hypervascular metastases: Hyperdense (intense) on arterial-phase CECT or CEMR

  • Cystic metastases (< 20 HU)

    • Fluid levels, debris, mural nodules

    • Very bright (like cysts) on T2WI MR (but more complex)

  • Liver-specific MR contrast agents (e.g., gadoxetate)

    • Metastases: Hypointense lesions become more apparent compared with bright enhancement of liver on delayed-phase imaging

  • CECT is usually best as whole-body screening test

    • Even better if combined as PET/CT

    • Metastases and lymphoma are usually FDG-avid masses

  • Decision for thermal ablation or surgical resection

    • May require most sensitive tests (gadoxetate-enhanced MR, PET/CT, or intraoperative US)

  • US : Hypoechoic metastases; usually from hypovascular tumors

    • Hyperechoic metastases: From GI or hypervascular primaries

    • Cystic metastases: Complex walls and contents

Diagnostic Checklist

  • Multiphasic (arterial- and venous-phase) CT

    • Known or suspected hypervascular (e.g., endocrine) primary tumor

Axial CECT shows multiple spherical liver lesions
with a target appearance. This is the most typical appearance for liver metastases, especially from colon cancer. Also note the focally dilated bile ducts
due to compression by the metastases.

Color Doppler ultrasound in the same patient shows multiple spherical liver lesions with a target appearance
, some containing visible blood vessels
. This is the typical appearance of metastatic colorectal carcinoma.

Axial T1WI C+ MR in a patient with metastatic colon cancer shows multiple liver metastases with several typical features, including a continuous ring of enhancement
.

Axial T2WI FS MR in the same patient shows heterogeneous hyperintensity within the hepatic metastases
. Most metastases are heterogeneously hyperintense on T2WI and hypovascular and hypointense on T1WI.

TERMINOLOGY

Definitions

  • Lymphoma: Neoplasm of lymphoid tissues

  • Metastases: Malignant spread of neoplasm to hepatic parenchyma

IMAGING

General Features

  • Best diagnostic clue

    • Lymphoma: Lobulated, low-density, hypovascular masses

    • Metastases: Multiple hypo-/hyperdense lesions scattered throughout liver in random distribution

  • Location

    • Lymphoma (HD & NHL) favors periportal areas due to high content of lymphatic tissue

  • Size

    • Variable; few millimeters to > 10 centimeters

  • Morphology

    • Usually spherical

  • Key concepts

    • Hepatic lymphoma: Non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) > Hodgkin lymphoma

      • Primary (rare); secondary in up to 50% of patients with NHL

      • High-risk groups: Transplant recipients and AIDS patients

    • Liver metastases

      • Most common malignant tumor of liver

        • Compared to primary malignant tumors (18:1)

      • Liver is 2nd only to regional lymph nodes as site of metastatic disease

      • Autopsy studies reveal 55% of oncology patients have liver metastases

CT Findings

  • CECT

    • Lymphoma

      • Diffuse infiltration and low density

      • Multiple well-defined, homogeneous, low-density masses

    • Hypovascular metastases (most common type)

      • Low-attenuation center with peripheral rim enhancement

      • Indicates vascularized viable tumor in periphery and hypovascular or necrotic center

      • Rim enhancement may also be due to compressed normal parenchyma

    • Hypervascular metastases (usually from endocrine primary tumor)

      • Hyperdense in late arterial-phase images

      • May have internal necrosis without uniform hyperdense enhancement

      • Hypo-/isodense on NECT and portal venous phase

        • Often washout to become hypodense on delayed-phase CECT

      • Examples: Islet cell, carcinoid, thyroid and renal carcinomas, and pheochromocytoma

    • Cystic metastases (< 20 HU)

      • Fluid levels, debris, mural nodules

MR Findings

  • T1WI

    • Lymphoma and metastases: Hypointense lesions

      • Melanoma metastases: Hyperintense due to melanin

  • T2WI

    • Lymphoma: Focal or diffusely hyperintense

    • Metastases

      • Moderate to high signal relative to background liver

      • Very high signal intensity (e.g., cystic and neuroendocrine metastases)

        • Mimic cysts or hemangiomas but usually with thick wall or fluid level

  • T1WI C+

    • Hypovascular metastases

      • Same pattern of enhancement as CECT

      • Low signal in center and peripheral rim enhancement

      • Perilesional enhancement may be tumor vascularity or hepatic edema

    • Hypervascular metastases

      • Hyperintense enhancement on arterial phase

  • Hepatobiliary contrast agents [e.g., gadoxetate (Eovist, Primovist)]

    • On delayed scans, normal liver is brightly enhanced

    • Metastases are conspicuous as hypointense focal lesions

    • Most sensitive, but not specific, imaging test for determining presence and number of metastases

Ultrasonographic Findings

  • Grayscale ultrasound

    • Hepatic lymphoma

      • Multiple well-defined, hypoechoic lesions

      • Diffuse form: May detect innumerable subcentimeter hypoechoic foci

        • Otherwise indistinguishable from normal or fatty liver

    • Metastases: Heterogeneously echoic masses

    • Bull's-eye or target metastatic lesions

      • Alternating layers of hyper- and hypoechoic tissue

      • Solid mass with hypoechoic rim or halo

      • Usually from aggressive primary tumors

    • Cystic metastases

      • Almost all show complex walls and contents

    • Calcified metastases

      • Markedly echogenic with acoustic shadowing

  • Intraoperative US: Reference standard for hepatic tumors of all kinds

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