Khaled Y Elbanna1,2,3, Mohammed F Mohammed1, Tejbir Chahal4, Faisal Khosa1, Ismail Tawakol Ali1, Ferco H Berger3, Savvas Nicolaou1. 1. 1 Department of Emergency and Trauma Radiology, Vancouver General Hospital, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada. 2. 2 Present address: 2075 Bayview Ave, Toronto, ON M4N 3M5, Canada. 3. 3 Department of Radiology, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, Toronto, ON, Canada. 4. 4 Faculty of Medicine, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The hypothesis of this study was that the use of dual-energy spectral techniques in CT can improve accuracy in the diagnosis of acute gangrenous appendicitis. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This retrospective study included 209 patients with a pathologic diagnosis of appendicitis. Two board-certified abdominal radiologists reviewed 120-kV simulated images, 40-keV virtual monoenergetic images, and color-coded iodine overlay images. Sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values (PPV and NPV), accuracy, and interobserver agreement were calculated for each set of images. RESULTS: Forty-four patients (21.0%) had histopathologic results positive for gangrenous appendicitis. The sensitivity of 40-kV virtual monoenergetic imaging was 100% (44/44); specificity, 81.2% (134/165); PPV, 58.7% (44/75); NPV, 100% (134/134); accuracy, 85.2%; and interobserver agreement, 0.99. The corresponding values for the iodine overlay imaging datasets were 100% (44/44), 80.0% (132/165), 57.1% (44/77), 100% (132/132), 84.2%, and 0.99 and for 120-kV simulated imaging were 22.7% (10/44), 96.4% (159/165), 62.5% (10/16), 82.4% (159/193), 77.5%, and 0.93. All cases of gangrenous appendicitis had true-positive results of virtual monoenergetic and iodine overlay imaging. There were no false-negative results of virtual monoenergetic or iodine overlay imaging. CONCLUSION: In cases of suspected appendicitis, dual-energy CT that includes virtual monoenergetic and iodine overlay imaging is accurate for confirming and excluding the presence of gangrenous appendicitis with high sensitivity and specificity.
RCT Entities:
OBJECTIVE: The hypothesis of this study was that the use of dual-energy spectral techniques in CT can improve accuracy in the diagnosis of acute gangrenous appendicitis. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This retrospective study included 209 patients with a pathologic diagnosis of appendicitis. Two board-certified abdominal radiologists reviewed 120-kV simulated images, 40-keV virtual monoenergetic images, and color-coded iodine overlay images. Sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values (PPV and NPV), accuracy, and interobserver agreement were calculated for each set of images. RESULTS: Forty-four patients (21.0%) had histopathologic results positive for gangrenous appendicitis. The sensitivity of 40-kV virtual monoenergetic imaging was 100% (44/44); specificity, 81.2% (134/165); PPV, 58.7% (44/75); NPV, 100% (134/134); accuracy, 85.2%; and interobserver agreement, 0.99. The corresponding values for the iodine overlay imaging datasets were 100% (44/44), 80.0% (132/165), 57.1% (44/77), 100% (132/132), 84.2%, and 0.99 and for 120-kV simulated imaging were 22.7% (10/44), 96.4% (159/165), 62.5% (10/16), 82.4% (159/193), 77.5%, and 0.93. All cases of gangrenous appendicitis had true-positive results of virtual monoenergetic and iodine overlay imaging. There were no false-negative results of virtual monoenergetic or iodine overlay imaging. CONCLUSION: In cases of suspected appendicitis, dual-energy CT that includes virtual monoenergetic and iodine overlay imaging is accurate for confirming and excluding the presence of gangrenous appendicitis with high sensitivity and specificity.
Authors: Joachim Wilfried Heise; Heiner Kentrup; Christoph Gerhart Dietrich; Ansgar Cosler; Dolores Hübner; Werner Krumholz Journal: Visc Med Date: 2020-10-05
Authors: Wonju Hong; Min Jeong Kim; Sang Min Lee; Hong Il Ha; Hyoung Chul Park; Seung Gu Yeo Journal: Korean J Radiol Date: 2020-08-11 Impact factor: 3.500