| Literature DB >> 30038987 |
Mehtap Çavuşoğlu1, Deniz Sözmen Ciliz1, Arzu Ozsoy1, Semra Duran1, Eda Elverici1, Cemal Reşat Atalay1, Ozhan Ozdemir1, Bulent Sakman1.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To investigate the feasibility of diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (DWI) with apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) values in differentiating endometrial cancer from benign endometrial lesions in postmenopausal patients with vaginal bleeding and endometrial thickening and to predict the depth of myometrial invasion in endometrial cancer.Entities:
Keywords: Diffusion-weighted imaging; Endometrial carcinoma; Endometrial hyperplasia; Endometrial polyp; Magnetic resonance imaging
Year: 2016 PMID: 30038987 PMCID: PMC5854227 DOI: 10.5334/jbr-btr.1118
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Belg Soc Radiol ISSN: 2514-8281 Impact factor: 1.894
Summary of Characteristics of Patients and Histopathology Data.
| Characteristics | Patients (n: 52) |
|---|---|
| Age | 57 ± 10 years (41–79 years) |
| Endometrial thickness | 16.7 ± 9.3mm (5–46 mm) |
| Histology | |
| Endometritis- hyperplasia | 27 (51.9%) |
| Polip | 11 (21.2%) |
| Endometrioid adenocarcinoma | |
| Grade 1 | 10 (19.2%) |
| Grade 2 | 4 (7.7%) |
Figure 1Scatter plots of the ADC values obtained in benign and malignant lesions. The ADC values are significantly different between benign and malignant lesions (P = 0.001).
Figure 2A 54-year-old woman with a histopathologically proven endometrial polyp. Sagittal T2-weighted fast spin-echo image (a) shows a hyperintense mass in the endometrial cavity. Sagittal gadolinium enhanced fat-saturated spin-echo T1-weighted image (b) shows the mass as an enhanced lesion. Sagittal apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) map image constructed from diffusion-weighted image (b = 1000s/mm2) (c). On the ADC map, the tumor shows a high signal intensity, and the ADC value is 1.68x10–3 mm2/s.
Figure 3A 47-year-old woman with benign endometrial hyperplasia. Sagittal T2-weighted fast spin-echo image (a) shows diffuse endometrial thickening, and hyperintense cysts are seen in the endometrial cavity. Sagittal ADC map image constructed from diffusion-weighted image (b = 1000s/mm2) (b). On the ADC map, the endometrial cavity shows a heterogeneously high signal intensity, and the ADC value is 1.74x10–3 (c).
Figure 4A 48-year-old woman with endometrial cancer. Axial fast spin-echo T2-weighted image shows hyperintense endometrial mass (a). Sagittal diffusion-weighted image (b = 1000s/mm2) shows the hyperintense endometrial mass with myometrial invasion (b). Sagittal gadolinium-enhanced fat-saturated spin-echo T1-weighted image shows the tumor as a slightly enhanced lesion (c). Sagittal ADC map image constructed from diffusion-weighted image (b = 1000s/mm2). The ADC value is 0.86x10–3 (d).
Figure 5A 56-year-old woman with endometrial cancer. Sagittal T2-weighted fast spin-echo image showing a hyperintense mass in the endometrial cavity (a). Sagittal gadolinium-enhanced fat-saturated spin-echo T1-weighted image shows the tumor as a slightly enhanced lesion (b). Axial diffusion weighted image (b = 1000s/mm2) (c) shows hyperintense FIGO stage 1A endometrial mass. The ADC value is 0.88x10–3 on the sagittal ADC map image (d).
Figure 6A 42-year-old woman with endometrial cancer. Coronal fast spin-echo T2-weighted image shows the endometrial mass (a). Sagittal gadolinium-enhanced fat-saturated spin-echo T1-weighted image shows the tumor as a slightly enhanced lesion (b). Sagittal diffusion-weighted image (b = 1000s/mm2) (c) shows FIGO stage 1B endometrial mass. The ADC value is 0.71x10–3 on the sagittal ADC map image (d).