Should We Have Blind Faith in Liver Volumetry?

Should We Have Blind Faith in Liver Volumetry?

Author Info

Corresponding Author
Nicolas Golse
Department of Hepato-Biliary Surgery, Paul-Brousse Hospital, Assistance Publique des Hôpitaux de Paris, Centre Hépato-Biliaire, Villejuif, 94800, France

A B S T R A C T

Introduction: Liver volumetry is a routine procedure performed before major hepatectomy or living donor liver transplantation (LDLT) to anticipate the remnant liver volume and prevent liver failure. However, many parameters may impact its accuracy and no large-scale studies have evaluated inter-rater variabilities. We aimed to determine the reliability of volumetric assessments for whole organs in deceased-donor liver transplantations (DDLT) and partial organs in LDLT settings. Patients & Methods: Eight operators (four surgeons + four radiologists) analysed 30 preoperative CT scans (15 whole cirrhotic livers in the DDLT group + 15 partial healthy grafts in the LDLT group), using five software systems. The computed volumes were compared with liver weight; liver density being considered as1. Results: Inter-rater and inter-software concordances were excellent with coefficients of correlation >0.9. However, calculations overestimated the real volumes in 25 cases by a mean of 249 ± 206 [14-771] cc in the DDLT group and 138 ± 92cc [39-375] in the LDLT group. The mean calculations were significantly higher than liver weights in the LDLT group only (p=0.04). The radiologists overestimated the surgeons’ assessment in 24 cases, the differences exceeding 6% in some cases. The type of software used significantly impacted results in the DDLTgroup. Conclusions: Despite its unanimously recognised utility, we highlight significant discrepancies between estimated and real liver volumes. The global overestimation may lead to leave of too small remnant liver, with potentially dramatic consequences. In case of border-line estimations, we recommend a repetition of the evaluation by another operator (surgeon + radiologist working in concert).

Article Info

Article Type
Research Article
Publication history
Received: Tue 08, Jan 2019
Accepted: Wed 30, Jan 2019
Published: Tue 12, Feb 2019
Copyright
© 2023 Nicolas Golse. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. Hosting by Science Repository.
DOI: 10.31487/j.SCR.2019.01.003