| Literature DB >> 25302086 |
Urszula Zaleska-Dorobisz1, Mateusz Lasecki1, Ewa Nienartowicz1, Joanna Pelak2, Joanna Słonina1, Cyprian Olchowy1, Marek Scieżka2, Marek Sąsiadek1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Virtual colonoscopy (VC) enables three-dimensional view of walls and internal lumen of the colon as a result of reconstruction of multislice CT images. The role of VC in diagnosis of the colon abnormalities systematically increases, and in many medical centers all over the world is carried out as a screening test of patients with high risk of colorectal cancer. MATERIAL/Entities:
Keywords: Colonic Neoplasms; Colonography; Colonoscopes; Computed Tomographic
Year: 2014 PMID: 25302086 PMCID: PMC4191567 DOI: 10.12659/PJR.890621
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pol J Radiol ISSN: 1733-134X
Figure 1Virtual colonoscopy in an asymptomatic average-risk 62-year-old man shows a large 28-mm polyp in the transverse colon, which proved to be a well-differentiated invasive adenocarcinoma after removal at the same-day colonoscopy. The patient underwent subsequent extended right hemicolectomy without complications.
Examination criteria.
| VC inclusion criteria | Conventional colonoscopy exclusion criteria |
|---|---|
|
Fecal occult blood (207) Previous incomplete colonoscopy – length limitation (39) – procedure intolerance (50) Anemia (60) Abdominal LLQ pain (42) Altered bowel habits (31) Polyps detected in past examinations (31) Bright red blood (25) Family history of neoplasm (22) |
Active diverticulitis (28) Inability to cooperate (26) Patient refusal (8) Multiple diverticula (5) Angulation/additional loops (4) Spasticity (2) Ulcerative collitis (2) |
Part of the patients had more than one symptom;
Procedures performed in other centers.
Change of the colon position in CT colonoscopy of 360 patients.
| Changes of the colon position | Number of patients | % |
|---|---|---|
| Low position of the of transverse colon | 60 | 16.6% |
| Elongation of the bowel | 49 | 13.6% |
| Additional loops of sigmoid | 29 | 8.0% |
| Additional loops of transverse colon | 24 | 6.6% |
| Summary | 162 | 45.0% |
Anatomical changes in CT colonoscopy of 360 patients.
| Changes of the colon | Number of patients | % |
|---|---|---|
| Anatomical lesions | 146 | 40.6% |
| Stenosis of the colon | 14 | 3.9% |
| Diverticulitis and single diverticula | 44 | 12.2% |
| Summary | 204 | 56.7% |
The number of patients according to AJCC staging.
| AJCC Stage | T (tumor size) | N (node status) | M (metastasis) | Number of patients |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| I | T1 | N0 | M0 | 18 |
| T2 | N0 | M0 | 39 | |
| II-A | T3 | N0 | M0 | 13 |
| II-B | T4 | N0 | M0 | 10 |
| III-A | T1/T2 | N1 | M0 | 23 |
| III-B | T3/T4 | N1 | M0 | 12 |
| III-C | T1/T2/T3/T4 | N2 | M0 | 5 |
| IV | T1/T2/T3/T4 | N2 | M1 | 8 |
| 119 |
VC compared to the conventional colonoscopy.
| VC compared to the conventional colonoscopy | |
|---|---|
| Sensitivity | 85.0% [CI 95; 80–91] |
| Specificity | 98.2% [CI 95; 87.1–91.8] |
| NPV | 89.7% |
| PPV | 85.0% |
Figure 2Conventional colonoscopy shows a big tumor in the transverse colon.
Figure 3VC. MPR view of the ascending colon demonstrates irregular malignant infiltration narrowing the lumen of the colon.
Figure 4VC. Endoluminal surface-rendered three-dimensional reconstruction of the ascending colon cancer.
Figure 5Polyp with atypical density. Axial image shows a lesion with focal central low density suggesting that it might be stool, but the lesion did not move when prone and supine views were compared. The use of intravenous contrast agent is an alternative way to help detect polyps. The decision to administer contrast, must be made at the time of examination.