einstein (São Paulo). 25/nov/2025;23:eAO1895.

Pulmonary nodules near fissures in hepatocellular carcinoma: assessing their clinical significance

Leonardo Chaves , Gilberto , Gustavo Borges da Silva , Patrícia , Rodrigo Caruso , Eduardo Kaiser Ururahy Nunes

DOI: 10.31744/einstein_journal/2025AO1895

Highlights

■ Typical perifissural nodules remain radiologically stable with no metastatic potential.
■ Only two nodules progressed to metastasis (one atypical perifissural nodule and one non-perifissural nodule).
■ Atypical and non-perifissural nodules require closer follow-up.
■ Annual growth rate was a strong marker of malignancy.

ABSTRACT

Objective:

To evaluate whether pulmonary nodules adjacent to fissures, particularly perifissural nodules detected on chest computed tomography in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma, can be reliably classified as benign based on their radiological characteristics.

Methods:

This retrospective cohort study included patients diagnosed with hepatocellular carcinoma (LI-RADS 5) between 2018 and 2022 at two reference hospitals. The patients underwent at least two follow-up chest computed tomography scans, with a minimum interval of 1 year, to identify at least one pulmonary nodule adjacent to the fissures. Statistical analyses were performed to assess the nodule classification, growth rates, and their association with metastatic progression.

Results:

In total, 55 patients (mean age 62.4±7.7 years) and 92 nodules were analyzed. Perifissural nodules were classified as typical (n=55, 59.8%), atypical (n=17, 18.5%), or non-perifissural nodule (n=20, 21.7%). Only two nodules (2.2%) progressed to metastasis: one non-perifissural nodule and one atypical perifissural nodule with histopathological confirmation. Statistical analysis did not reveal a significant association between perifissural nodule classification and metastatic progression (p=0.155); however, nodules that progressed to metastasis exhibited significantly higher annual growth rates (p<0.001).

Conclusion:

Most perifissural nodules in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma showed radiological stability and did not progress to metastasis, indicating a low probability of malignancy. However, given the limited sample size and the number of metastatic events, these findings should be interpreted with caution. Typical perifissural nodules may be considered low risk, whereas atypical perifissural nodule and non-perifissural nodules require closer follow-up. Further studies are required to confirm these preliminary findings.

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Pulmonary nodules near fissures in hepatocellular carcinoma: assessing their clinical significance
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