Purpose: The aim of the present retrospective single-center study is to evaluate the diagnostic performance of contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) in the evaluation of renal oncocytoma.Method: Thirteen patients with histopathologically confirmed renal oncocytoma and 26 patients with histopathologically confirmed renal cell carcinoma were included in this retrospective single-center study on whom CEUS was performed between 2005 and 2015. The applied contrast agent was a second-generation blood pool agent. CEUS examinations were performed and interpreted by a single radiologist with more than 15 years of experience (EFSUMB Level 3). Results: CEUS examinations were successfully performed in all included patients without any adverse effects. Renal oncocytomas showed varying echogenicity (46% hypoechoic, 23% hyperechoic, 8% iso-/hyperechoic, 8% isoechoic). In two cases renal oncocytoma only demarcated upon i.v. application of contrast medium. In bilateral oncocytosis, lesions presented as hyperechoic. Only 23% of renal oncocytomas showed slight vascularization using Color Doppler. No oncocytoma-specific pattern of microperfusion could be elucidated: 85% of the oncocytomas presented hyperenhancing, of whom 50% also showed delayed venous wash-out; 8% of renal oncocytomas showed venous wash-out without early arterial hyperenhancement.Conclusions: Within the frame of the present study and in line with the recent state of knowledge, no specific sonomorphological feature - including CEUS - could be detected allowing for adequate discrimination between oncocytoma and renal cell carcinoma.
Purpose: The aim of the present retrospective single-center study is to evaluate the diagnostic performance of contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) in the evaluation of renal oncocytoma.Method: Thirteen patients with histopathologically confirmed renal oncocytoma and 26 patients with histopathologically confirmed renal cell carcinoma were included in this retrospective single-center study on whom CEUS was performed between 2005 and 2015. The applied contrast agent was a second-generation blood pool agent. CEUS examinations were performed and interpreted by a single radiologist with more than 15 years of experience (EFSUMB Level 3). Results: CEUS examinations were successfully performed in all included patients without any adverse effects. Renal oncocytomas showed varying echogenicity (46% hypoechoic, 23% hyperechoic, 8% iso-/hyperechoic, 8% isoechoic). In two cases renal oncocytoma only demarcated upon i.v. application of contrast medium. In bilateral oncocytosis, lesions presented as hyperechoic. Only 23% of renal oncocytomas showed slight vascularization using Color Doppler. No oncocytoma-specific pattern of microperfusion could be elucidated: 85% of the oncocytomas presented hyperenhancing, of whom 50% also showed delayed venous wash-out; 8% of renal oncocytomas showed venous wash-out without early arterial hyperenhancement.Conclusions: Within the frame of the present study and in line with the recent state of knowledge, no specific sonomorphological feature - including CEUS - could be detected allowing for adequate discrimination between oncocytoma and renal cell carcinoma.
Authors: Thomas Geyer; Vincent Schwarze; Constantin Marschner; Moritz L Schnitzer; Matthias F Froelich; Johannes Rübenthaler; Dirk-André Clevert Journal: Medicina (Kaunas) Date: 2020-11-19 Impact factor: 2.430
Authors: Vincent Schwarze; Johannes Rübenthaler; Saša Čečatka; Constantin Marschner; Matthias Frank Froelich; Bastian Oliver Sabel; Michael Staehler; Thomas Knösel; Thomas Geyer; Dirk-André Clevert Journal: Medicina (Kaunas) Date: 2020-12-12 Impact factor: 2.430