| Literature DB >> 28683109 |
Julian Kirchner1, Lino M Sawicki1, Cornelius Deuschl2, Johannes Grüneisen2, Karsten Beiderwellen2, Thomas C Lauenstein2, Ken Herrmann3, Michael Forsting2, Philipp Heusch1, Lale Umutlu2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the added value of the application of the liver-specific contrast phase of Gadobenate dimeglumine (Gd-BOPTA) for detection and characterization of liver lesions in 18F-FDG PET/MRI.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28683109 PMCID: PMC5500282 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0180349
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Demographic characteristics.
| sex | number | mean age (years) |
|---|---|---|
| female | 21 | 56.4 ± 16 |
| male | 20 | 54.3 ± 12.8 |
List of primary tumors.
| Colorectal Carcinoma | 19 | 46 |
| Hepatocelluar Carcinoma | 4 | 10 |
| Melanoma | 4 | 10 |
| Cholangiocellular Carcinoma | 3 | 7 |
| Breast Cancer | 2 | 5 |
| Other | 9 | 22 |
| Total | 41 | 100 |
Fig 1Overview of the imaging protocol and timing of each image acquisition.
T1w VIBE = T1-weighted Volume-Interpolated Breath-hold Examination; T2w HASTE = T2-weighted Half Fourier Acquisition Single Shot Turbo Spin Echo; T1w FLASH = T1-weighted Fast Low-angle Shot; T2w TSE = T2-weighted Turbo-spin Echo; DW EPI = Diffusion-weighted Echo-Planar imaging.
Fig 2A 25-year-old female patient with a history of colorectal cancer presented multiple liver lesions after surgery.
The FNH in the right liver shows an arterial contrast-agent enhancement (A) and is still hyperintense in the liver-specific contrast phase (C). No significant 18F-FDG-uptake is seen (B, D). A second lesion in the right liver is rated as a colorectal liver metastasis due to incomplete resection. Tumor lesion is neither detectable by MRI without liver-specific contrast phase nor with liver-specific contrast phase (E; G). In fused PET/MR images (F; H) the remaining tumor tissue lesion could clearly be identified. Additional lesions near the liver hilus are adenomas with strong arterial contrast-agent enhancement (I). In the liver-specific contrast phase lesions are hypointense (K). Similar to the FNH, no significant 18F-FDG-uptake is seen (J, L).
Lesion character in benign liver lesions in accordance to reference standard.
| Liver cyst | 42 | 52.5 |
| Hemangioma | 11 | 13.75 |
| Focal nodular hyperplasia | 9 | 11.25 |
| Scar tissue | 6 | 7.5 |
| Avital metastases | 5 | 6.25 |
| Adenoma | 4 | 5 |
| Regenerative nodule | 2 | 2.5 |
| Inflammatory | 1 | 1.25 |
| Total | 80 | 100 |
Fig 3A 61-year-old male patient with liver metastases from a Colorectal Carcinoma.
The large metastasis with intense 18F-FDG-uptake in the right central liver lobe is clearly visible in all datasets (*). The metastasis in the Lobus caudatus does not show increased 18F-FDG-uptake (A, D) and is hardly detectable in the arterial-phase (B) but is clearly detectable as hypointense lesion in the liver-specific phase (C).
PET/MRI with liver specific-contrast phase (PET/MRI2) offers highest accuracy for lesion classification in malignant and benign compared to PET/MRI without liver-specific phase (PET/MRI1) and MRI with (MRI1) and without liver-specific phase (MRI2).
| Lesions | MRI1 (%) | MRI2 (%) | PET/MRI1 (%) | PET/MRI2 (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Malignant | 52 (91) | 53 (93) | 54 (95) | 56 (98) |
| Benign | 77 (96) | 77 (96) | 80 (100) | 80 (100) |
| Total | 129 (94) | 130 (95) | 134 (98) | 136 (99) |
Total numbers and the percentage (in parentheses) of correct classification in malignant and benign lesion for every modality are given.
Correct classification of benign lesion in the different modalities in percentage.
| MRI1 | MRI2 | PET/MRI1 | PET/MRI2 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| in % | 96 | 100 | 96 | 100 |
Fig 4Diagnostic confidence is significantly higher in PET/MRI2 and MRI2 datasets compared to PET/MRI1 and MRI.
Ratings for lesion conspicuity are entered on the y-axis. The vertical bar represents the upper and lower quartiles; the horizontal bar represents the median. The points represent extreme values. Significant differences are marked by a star.