Literature DB >> 16714637

Comparison of CT during arterial portography and MR during arterial portography in the detection of liver metastases.

W P Hosch1, S M Schmidt, S Plaza, C Dechow, J Schmidt, S Ley, G W Kauffmann, J Hansmann.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: This study compared MR during arterial portography (MRAP) with CT during arterial portography (CTAP) with regard to the detection and differentiation of liver metastases before surgery.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: Fifteen patients with liver metastases were enrolled before surgery according to the guidelines of our institutional review board and good clinical practice. After mesentericography, unenhanced scans (Volume Zoom) were performed initially. For CTAP, the contrast medium was injected through the superior mesenteric artery. Images were acquired in portal and delayed enhancement. The MR protocol (1.5 T; Magnetom Symphony) started with T1-weighted fast low-angle shot (FLASH) T2-weighted turbo spin echo (TSE). MRAP followed with gadolinium-enhanced dynamic T1-weighted 3D FLASH. Delayed-phase T1-weighted 2D FLASH axial images were performed 2 min after IV injection of the contrast medium. Qualitative and quantitative evaluation of CTAP and MRAP was performed by three blinded radiologists regarding the number of lesions and their size, localization, and differential diagnosis.
RESULTS: The overall sensitivity in detecting liver metastases was 97% with MRAP and 93% with CTAP (p > 0.05, not significant [n.s.]). The specificity was calculated to be 97% for MRAP and 82% for CTAP (p < 0.0001, statistically significant [s.s.]). The differences in sensitivity were more accentuated if only lesions 10 mm or smaller were considered (95% vs 88%, p > 0.05, n.s.), for which the respective specificities were 95% and 80% (p < 0.0014, s.s.). Improvements in sensitivity and specificity were associated with a higher lesion-to-liver contrast-to-noise ratio (59.4 +/- 51.0 for MRAP vs 10.4 +/- 7.3 for CTAP) and resulted in higher diagnostic confidence in the differential diagnosis of liver lesions (p < 0.001, s.s.) and better interobserver agreement (median kappa value, 0.88 vs 0.63).
CONCLUSION: MRAP proved to be a reliable method in the preoperative detection of small liver metastases in particular, with a higher sensitivity and specificity than CTAP. If organizational difficulties of MRAP can be overcome, MRAP could be considered instead of CTAP in the preoperative invasive evaluation of metastatic liver disease.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2006        PMID: 16714637     DOI: 10.2214/AJR.05.0879

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  AJR Am J Roentgenol        ISSN: 0361-803X            Impact factor:   3.959


  2 in total

1.  MR-arterioportography: a new technical approach for detection of liver lesions.

Authors:  Janine Rennert; Ernst-Michael Jung; Andreas G Schreyer; Patrick Hoffstetter; Peter Heiss; Stefan Feuerbach; Niels Zorger
Journal:  World J Gastroenterol       Date:  2011-04-07       Impact factor: 5.742

2.  Receiver operating characteristic analysis of diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging in differentiating hepatic hemangioma from other hypervascular liver lesions.

Authors:  Josephina A Vossen; Manon Buijs; Eleni Liapi; John Eng; David A Bluemke; Ihab R Kamel
Journal:  J Comput Assist Tomogr       Date:  2008 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 1.826

  2 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.