Purpose: To determine the frequency, distribution, size, and cause of enlarged abdominal lymph nodes in patients with end-stage cirrhosis.
Materials and methods: Preoperative computed tomographic (CT) scans from 507 hepatic transplantation patients with end-stage cirrhosis were reviewed for the presence, size, and location of enlarged (short-axis diameter > 1 cm) abdominal lymph nodes. Enlarged lymph nodes were identified and resected at surgery. Resected livers were evaluated for malignant neoplasms. CT findings were correlated with histopathologic results.
Results: Enlarged abdominal lymph nodes were detected with CT in 253 (50%) of the patients. The enlarged nodes were 1.1 x 1.1 to 3.0 x 4.5 cm in size and were most common in the portacaval space and porta hepatis. The frequency of enlarged nodes varied according to type of cirrhosis: They were most common in patients with primary biliary cirrhosis (86% [43 of 50]) and least common in patients with alcohol-induced cirrhosis (37% [42 of 113]). Histologic evaluation revealed that the enlarged lymph nodes were due to benign nodal hyperplasia in 251 patients and malignant neoplasm in two patients.
Conclusion: Enlarged abdominal lymph nodes are common in patients with all forms of end-stage cirrhosis. In the absence of other evidence of malignancy, enlarged nodes in these patients should be considered a benign process, with no additional evaluation warranted.