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Diagnosis and management of solid benign liver lesions

Journal

NATURE REVIEWS GASTROENTEROLOGY & HEPATOLOGY
Volume 11, Issue 12, Pages 737-749

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nrgastro.2014.151

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More and more asymptomatic benign liver tumours are discovered incidentally and can be divided into regenerative lesions and true neoplastic lesions. The most common regenerative lesions include hemangioma, focal nodular hyperplasia and inflammatory pseudotumours of the liver. Neoplastic lesions include hepatocellular adenomas and angionnyolipomas. Regenerative lesions rarely increase in volume, do not yield a higher risk of complications and usually do not require treatment. By contrast, hepatocellular adenomas and angionnyolipomas can increase in volume and are associated with a risk of complications. Large hepatocellular adenomas (>5cm in diameter) are undoubtedly associated with a risk of bleeding and malignant transformation, particularly the inflammatory (also known as telangiectatic) and beta-catenin mutated subtypes. Accurate diagnosis needs to be obtained to select patients eligible for surgical resection. MRI has markedly improved diagnosis and can identify the major hepatocellular adenomas subtypes. The use of biopsy results to inform the indication for resection remains questionable. However, when diagnosis remains uncertain after imaging, percutaneous biopsy could help improve diagnostic accuracy.

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