Nonoperative Management of Hepatic Adenomas: A Review.

Journal: Journal of gastrointestinal cancer

This publication is a narrative review focused on the current understanding and management of hepatic adenomas (HAs).

Key points:

  • Epidemiology and risk factors

HAs are benign liver tumors with risks of hemorrhage and malignant transformation that rise with increasing tumor size.

They have been historically associated with estrogen-containing oral contraceptives.

Obesity and related metabolic factors are now recognized as important additional risk factors for HA development and growth.

  • Risk stratification

Management is guided by:

  • Tumor size (with >5 cm conferring higher risk)
  • Symptoms
  • Histologic subtype
  • Patient-specific factors (e.g., sex, pregnancy status, comorbidities, number of lesions)
  • Traditional management

Surgical resection has been the standard for:

  • Large
  • Symptomatic
  • Or otherwise high-risk lesions (e.g., concern for malignant transformation or hemorrhage)
  • Non-operative approaches

Active surveillance: appropriate for small (<5 cm), asymptomatic HAs lacking additional risk factors.

Loco-regional therapies:

  • Transarterial embolization
  • Radiofrequency ablation

These are used effectively, particularly for smaller tumors or in patients who are not ideal surgical candidates.

Weight-loss interventions:

  • Lifestyle-based weight reduction and bariatric surgery are increasingly supported by evidence as effective in decreasing HA size.
  • This has led to consideration of non-operative management even for some larger lesions (>5 cm) when they show regression with weight loss.
  • Special populations

Particular attention is needed for:

  • Pregnant patients
  • Men
  • Patients with hepatic adenomatosis

These groups require special consideration because their baseline risk profiles and management thresholds may differ.

  • Overall conclusion

Management of HAs is shifting from a primarily surgical paradigm to a more nuanced, risk-adapted strategy.

A personalized, multidisciplinary approach is emphasized, incorporating surveillance, loco-regional therapies, weight-loss strategies, and emerging targeted options to minimize morbidity while maintaining safety.

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