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Spontaneous Regression Of Hepatocellular Carcinoma: Its Imaging Course Leading To Complete Disappearance.

Okano & Ohana, 2015Liver cancer

Okano, A., & Ohana, M. (2015). spontaneous regression of hepatocellular carcinoma: its imaging course leading to complete disappearance. Case reports in oncology, 8(1), 94–100. https://doi.org/10.1159/000375486

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Abstract

Spontaneous regression of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a rare phenomenon. We followed a detailed clinical course of a spontaneous and complete disappearance of HCC during a short interval. A 73-year-old man with hepatitis B virus infection presented with a 15-mm mass in the right anterior superior segment of the liver. The mass was diagnosed as HCC by imaging findings. We found an elevated serum α-fetoprotein (AFP) level of 748 ng/ml. The tumor regressed to 6 mm on imaging examination, and the AFP serum level decreased to 87.8 ng/ml 1 month after the diagnostic hepatic angiography. Therefore, the patient was followed up without any treatment for HCC. The tumor disappeared 5 months later when the AFP serum level was 5.0 ng/ml. The diagnostic hepatic angiography might have had some effect on the spontaneous regression of HCC in the present case.

Case Details

Disease Location

Liver

Personal Characteristics

A 73-year-old man with hepatitis b virus (HBV) infection. He consumed 25 g of alcohol daily for 50 years and had also smoked 10 cigarettes per day for 50 years.

Clinical Characteristics

Abdominal us demonstrated a hypoechoic mass of 15 mm in diameter in s8. Low signal in t1 MRI sequence and high signal in t2. We diagnosed this case as hcc stage i (t1n0m0)

Remission Characteristics

Anterior lobectomy of the liver was planned. However, 1 month after the initial diagnosis, a plain MRI disclosed a regression of the tumour to 6 mm, and the AFP serum level decreased to 87.8 ng/ml. He had stopped alcohol consumption and smoking after the hcc diagnosis. Six months after the initial diagnosis, follow-up MRI showed no mass

Treatment & Mechanisms

Proposed Remission Mechanisms

Ischemia secondary to angiography

Non-Clinical Treatment

Stopped alcohol consumption and smoking after diagnosis.