Rajesh P. Shah
Stanford University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Rajesh P. Shah.
Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology | 2013
David S. Wang; John D. Louie; N. Kothary; Rajesh P. Shah; Daniel Y. Sze
Cutaneous complications can result from nontarget deposition during transcatheter arterial chemoembolization or radioembolization. Liver tumors may receive blood supply from parasitized extrahepatic arteries (EHAs) that also perfuse skin or from hepatic arteries located near the origin of the falciform artery (FA), which perfuses the anterior abdominal wall. To vasoconstrict cutaneous vasculature and prevent nontarget deposition, ice packs were topically applied to at-risk skin in nine chemoembolization treatments performed via 14 parasitized EHAs, seven chemoembolization treatments near the FA origin, and five radioembolization treatments in cases in which the FA could not be prophylactically coil-embolized. No postprocedural cutaneous complications were encountered.
Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology | 2011
Xiaodong Wang; Rajesh P. Shah; Majid Maybody; Karen T. Brown; George I. Getrajdman; C. Stevenson; Elena N. Petre; Stephen B. Solomon
PURPOSE During transcatheter hepatic therapy, the cystic artery feeding the gallbladder may inadvertently be exposed to tumor therapy. Localization of the cystic artery may help prevent exposure. The objective of this study was to compare the application of a vessel tracking system software based on three-dimensional (3D) angiography versus standard two-dimensional (2D) angiography for identifying the cystic artery and its origin. MATERIALS AND METHODS A software system that can rapidly localize the cystic artery from a 3D common hepatic angiogram was applied in 25 patients and was compared with manual localization of the cystic artery with conventional 2D digital subtraction common hepatic angiograms. RESULTS With the vessel tracking software prototype, 28 cystic arteries were retrogradely tracked in 25 of 25 cases. The origin sites were correctly located by the software in 27 of 28 cystic arteries, with one mistracked as a result of streak artifact. By contrast, on standard 2D hepatic angiography, the cystic artery was deemed visible with certainty in 12 of 25 cases (P < .001). The vessel tracking system revealed a 56% prevalence of extraanatomic distribution by the cystic artery, with the most common supply going to segment 5 liver parenchyma. CONCLUSIONS The 3D vessel rapid tracking system has advantages over conventional 2D hepatic angiography in revealing the cystic artery and its origin site. It is also an important tool to identify the complete distribution of the cystic artery without superselective angiography. Supply to adjacent hepatic parenchyma or tumor by the cystic artery is not insignificant and should be considered during hepatic therapies.
Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology | 2015
Thomas J. Ward; Anobel Tamrazi; Marnix G. E. H. Lam; John D. Louie; Peter N. Kao; Rajesh P. Shah; Michael Kadoch; Daniel Y. Sze
PURPOSE To review the safety of hepatic radioembolization (RE) in patients with high (≥ 10%) hepatopulmonary shunt fraction (HPSF) using various prophylactic techniques. MATERIALS AND METHODS A review was conducted of 409 patients who underwent technetium 99m-labeled macroaggregated albumin scintigraphy before planned RE. Estimated pulmonary absorbed radiation doses based on scintigraphy and hepatic administered activity were calculated. Outcomes from dose reductions and adjunctive catheter-based prophylactic techniques used to reduce lung exposure were assessed. RESULTS There were 80 patients with HPSF ≥ 10% who received RE treatment (41 resin microspheres for metastases, 39 glass microspheres for hepatocellular carcinoma). Resin microspheres were used in 17 patients according to consensus guideline-recommended dose reduction; 38 patients received no dose reduction because the expected lung dose was < 30 Gy. Prophylactic techniques were used in 25 patients (with expected lung dose ≤ 74 Gy), including hepatic vein balloon occlusion, variceal embolization, or bland arterial embolization before, during, or after RE delivery. Repeated scintigraphy after prophylactic techniques to reduce HPSF in seven patients demonstrated a median change of -40% (range, +32 to -69%). Delayed pneumonitis developed in two patients, possibly related to radiation recall after chemoembolization. Response was lower in patients treated with resin spheres with dose reduction, with an objective response rate of 13% and disease control rate of 47% compared with 56% and 94%, respectively, without dose reduction (P = .023, P = .006). CONCLUSIONS Dose reduction recommendations for HPSF may compromise efficacy. Excessive shunting can be reduced by prophylactic catheter-based techniques, which may improve the safety of performing RE in patients with high HPSF.
American Journal of Roentgenology | 2011
Rajesh P. Shah; Karen T. Brown; Constantinos T. Sofocleous
OBJECTIVE Arterially directed therapies for hepatocellular carcinoma are used for patients who are not candidates for surgery or ablation and for those who need a bridge or down-staging to liver transplantation. These therapies seem to prolong the overall survival when compared with supportive care. CONCLUSION Chemoembolization, particle embolization, drug-eluting beads, and radioembolization have been used for locoregional control. This review discusses patient selection, techniques, safety, clinical outcomes, and imaging findings related to these therapies.
Journal of medical imaging | 2015
Sebastian Echegaray; Olivier Gevaert; Rajesh P. Shah; Aya Kamaya; John D. Louie; N. Kothary; Sandy Napel
Abstract. The purpose of this study is to investigate the utility of obtaining “core samples” of regions in CT volume scans for extraction of radiomic features. We asked four readers to outline tumors in three representative slices from each phase of multiphasic liver CT images taken from 29 patients (1128 segmentations) with hepatocellular carcinoma. Core samples were obtained by automatically tracing the maximal circle inscribed in the outlines. Image features describing the intensity, texture, shape, and margin were used to describe the segmented lesion. We calculated the intraclass correlation between the features extracted from the readers’ segmentations and their core samples to characterize robustness to segmentation between readers, and between human-based segmentation and core sampling. We conclude that despite the high interreader variability in manually delineating the tumor (average overlap of 43% across all readers), certain features such as intensity and texture features are robust to segmentation. More importantly, this same subset of features can be obtained from the core samples, providing as much information as detailed segmentation while being simpler and faster to obtain.
Journal of Clinical Neuroscience | 2008
Ron C. Gaba; Rajesh P. Shah; Andrew A. Muskovitz; Grace Guzman; Edward A. Michals
Moyamoya syndrome and cerebral aneurysm formation are rare cerebrovascular manifestations of Alagille syndrome. Although previously reported in isolation, occurrence of these complications in a single patient has not been described. We report clinical and imaging features of synchronous moyamoya syndrome and ruptured cerebral aneurysm in a patient with Alagille syndrome.
Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology | 2016
Osman Ahmed; Joshua Ng; Mikin V. Patel; Thomas J. Ward; David S. Wang; Rajesh P. Shah; Lawrence V. Hofmann
PURPOSE To assess the clinical utility of iliac vein stent placement for patients with chronic limb edema or pelvic congestion presenting with nonocclusive May-Thurner physiology. MATERIALS AND METHODS All patients (N = 45) undergoing stent placement for May-Thurner syndrome (MTS) without an associated acute thrombotic event between 2007 and 2014 were retrospectively reviewed; 11 were excluded for poor follow-up. A total of 34 patients (28 female) were studied (mean age, 44 y; range, 19-80 y). Average follow-up time was 649 days (median, 488 d; range, 8-2,499 d). RESULTS The technical success rate was 100% (34 of 34). No major and two minor (5%) complications occurred, and 68% of patients (23 of 34) had clinical success with relief of presenting symptoms on follow-up visits. Technical parameters including stent size and number, stent type, concurrent angioplasty, access site, and resolution of collateral iliolumbar vessels were not found to be statistically related to clinical success (P > .05). Similarly, no significant relation to clinical success was seen for clinical factors such as the type of symptoms, presence of chronic deep vein thrombosis (DVT), or concurrent coagulopathy (P > .05). Female sex was found to correlate with clinical success (82% vs 18%; P = .04). CONCLUSIONS Iliac stent placement in patients presenting with chronic limb or pelvic symptoms from MTS without acute DVT is associated with clinical success in the majority of patients.
CardioVascular and Interventional Radiology | 2012
Panagiotis Sideras; Constantinos T. Sofocleous; Lynn A. Brody; R.H. Siegelbaum; Rajesh P. Shah; Neeta-Pandit Taskar
We treated a patient with biopsy-proven, chemotherapy-resistant testicular cancer liver metastasis using Y-90 selective internal radiation treatment. We chose yttrium-90 rather than surgery and ablation due to tumor location and size as well as the patient’s clinical history. The result was marked tumor response by positron emission tomography and computed tomography as well as significant improvement of the patient’s quality of life accompanied by a substantial decrease of his tumor markers.
Seminars in Interventional Radiology | 2011
Rajesh P. Shah; Karen T. Brown
Hepatic arterial embolization (HAE) is a treatment used in the management of primary and some metastatic hepatic tumors. Complications of HAE are similar to those seen in other treatments, particularly transcatheter arterial chemoembolization (TACE), but without the possibility for chemotherapy related side effects. Particle reflux into the cystic artery is generally clinically occult but gallbladder ischemia severe enough to require cholecystostomy tube placement can occur. The authors discuss the case of a patient who underwent HAE and subsequently required a cholecystostomy tube due to development of acute cholecystitis.
Techniques in Vascular and Interventional Radiology | 2016
Rajesh P. Shah; Daniel Y. Sze
Transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt (TIPS) creation is a widely adopted treatment for complications of portal hypertension, including variceal hemorrhage and refractory ascites. The creation of a TIPS requires establishing a pathway from the portal vein to a hepatic vein or inferior vena cava through hepatic parenchyma, using a stent or stent graft to sustain patency of this pathway. Because it is a technically challenging procedure and patients may be critically ill with severe comorbidities, the risk of procedural complications and mortality is substantial. This article discusses known complications of the TIPS procedure and ways to minimize their occurrence.