Gastrointestinal Tract Injury by Yttrium-90 Appears Largely Restricted to Resin Microspheres But Can Occur Years After Embolization

Radioembolization therapy utilizes yttrium-90 (Y90) impregnated resin (SIR-Spheres) or glass (TheraSpheres) microspheres to selectively target hepatic lesions via transarterial radioembolization. Occasional cases of gastrointestinal tract injury, secondary to nontargeted delivery of microspheres, have been reported, but large descriptive pathology series are lacking. We identified 20 cases of histologically confirmed mucosal injury associated with Y90 from 17 patients and assessed the corresponding clinical and pathologic sequelae. The mucosal biopsies were obtained from 1 to 88 months following Y90 therapy (median: 5 mo). Most cases were gastric (17, 85%), while the remaining were duodenal. Endoscopic ulceration was seen in the majority of cases (16, 80%), and mucosal erythema in the remaining 4. Histologically, a majority (19, 95%) of cases showed rounded, dark blue to purple microspheres measuring 4 to 30 µm, consistent with resin microspheres. A single case with glass microspheres demonstrated 26 µm translucent beads. Histologic evidence of ulceration was appreciated in 14 (70%) cases, and the microspheres were clearly intravascular in 6 (30%). A foreign body giant cell reaction to the microspheres was uncommon (3 cases, 15%). We additionally performed a retrospective review of all gastrointestinal tissue obtained postprocedure from 784 sequential patients treated with Y90 microspheres. Three patients (0.4%) demonstrated the presence of resin microspheres upon his...
Source: The American Journal of Surgical Pathology - Category: Pathology Tags: Original Articles Source Type: research