| Literature DB >> 32313332 |
André Vaz1, Mauricio Zaparolli2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the retrospective accuracy of the Vesical Imaging-Reporting and Data System (VI-RADS) in detecting muscle invasion in bladder cancer.Entities:
Keywords: Data systems; Diffusion magnetic resonance imaging/methods; Magnetic resonance imaging/methods; Muscle, smooth/diagnostic imaging; Neoplasm invasiveness; Urinary bladder neoplasms
Year: 2020 PMID: 32313332 PMCID: PMC7159049 DOI: 10.1590/0100-3984.2019.0063
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Radiol Bras ISSN: 0100-3984
Differences between the pelvic imaging protocol used in the present study and that recommended in the VI-RADS.
| Protocol employed in this study | VI-RADS protocol(11) |
|---|---|
| Axial DWI/ADC mapping with b values of 50, 400, and 800 s/mm2 | Axial and coronal or sagittal DWI/ADC breath-hold spin echo-planar imaging sequence com-bined with spectral fat saturation and a high b value (800-1000 s/mm2) |
| Axial, sagittal, and coronal T2-weighted TSE sequences without fat suppression | T2-weighted TSE or FSE sequences, without fat suppression, in at least two planes (axial, sagittal, or coronal) |
| Axial T1-weighted sequence with fat suppression | 3D SE acquisitions (e.g., SPACE, CUBE, and VISTA) may be included |
| Contrast-enhanced axial T1-weighted sequence, with fat suppression, acquired at 60 s and at 5 min (in the excretory phase) | T1-weighted GRE (VIBE, LAVA, or THRIVE) sequence, with fat suppression, in 2D or 3D (3D is preferred), acquired before and 30 s after contrast injection, with new acquisitions every 30 s thereafter |
Standard pelvic imaging protocol employed at the private medical imaging clinic. ADC, apparent diffusion coefficient; TSE, turbo spin-echo; FSE, fast spin-echo; 3D, three-dimensional; SE, spin-echo; SPACE, sampling perfection with application-optimized contrasts using different flip angle evolution; VISTA, volume isotropic turbo spin-echo acquisition; CUBE, same as VISTA (by General Electric); 2D, two-dimensional; VIBE, volumetric interpolated breath-hold examination; LAVA, liver acquisition with volume acceleration; THRIVE, T1-weighted high resolution isotropic volume examination; GRE, gradient-recalled echo.
Figure 1A 73-year-old woman with multiple polypoid VI-RADS 2 lesions in the anterior bladder wall. The dominant lesion (arrow) presents a high-signal-intensity thickened inner layer and integrity of the adjacent muscularis propria on T2WI (A), early enhancement of the inner layer on dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI (B) and a low-signal-intensity stalk on DWI (C). Histopathological analysis of the lesion indicated high-grade papillary urothelial carcinoma with an area of invasion of subepithelial tissue and normal adjacent muscularis propria bundles.
Figure 2A 66-year-old man with a polypoid VI-RADS 3 lesion in the posterior bladder wall, without a high-signalintensity thickened inner layer but with no clear disruption the muscularis propria on T2WI (A), a high-signal-intensity inner layer in DWI (B), and no clear disruption of the muscularis propria in the 5-min excretory phase (not shown, early contrast phase not recorded). Histopathological analysis of the lesion indicated high-grade papillary urothelial carcinoma with foci of invasion of the subepithelial tissue and normal adjacent muscularis propria bundles.
Figure 3A 71-year-old man with post-TURBT focal thickening of the left lateral wall of the bladder, presenting interruption of the muscularis propria low-signal-intensity line, suggesting muscle infiltration on T2WI (asterisk in A), focal enhancement extending into the muscularis propria in dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI (asterisk in B) and a tiny focus of restricted diffusion in the muscularis propria (asterisk in C). The minimal bladder distention significantly impeded the evaluation of the lesion. Although most of the intravesical vegetative lesion was removed during TURBT, signs of remaining suspicious lesion persist with signs of extension to the muscularis propria, without obvious extravesical extension. We suggest that such lesions could be classified as VI-RADS 4 (muscle invasion likely). Histopathological analysis of the lesion indicated high-grade urothelial carcinoma with subepithelial and muscle invasion.
Figure 4An 86-year-old man with a post-TURBT VI-RADS 5 infiltrative lesion in the anterior bladder wall, presenting evident extravesical extension on T2WI (A,B), early enhancement extending to the extravesical fat (C), and high signal intensity, also extending to the extravesical fat, on DWI (D). Although most of the intravesical vegetative lesion was removed during TURBT, an extensive lesion persisted, allowing the characterization of MIBC. Histopathological analysis of the lesion indicated invasive high-grade papillary urothelial carcinoma with invasion of subepithelial tissues and infiltration of muscularis propria.
Sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value for each final VI-RADS score cutoff point.
| Sensitivity | Specificity | Positive predictive value | Negative predictive value | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Final VI-RADS score | Value 95% CI | Value 95% CI | Value 95% CI | Value 95% CI | Accuracy | |||||||
| > 2 | 100% | 56.0-100% | 36.3% | 18.0-59.1% | 33.3% | 15.4-56.8% | 100% | 59.7-100% | 51.7% | |||
| > 3 | 100% | 56.0-100% | 77.2% | 54.1-91.3% | 58.3% | 25.5-83.5% | 100% | 77.0-100% | 82.7% | |||
| > 4 | 100% | 56.0-100% | 90.9% | 69.3-98.4% | 77.7% | 40.1-96.0% | 100% | 79.9-100% | 93.1% | |||
| 5 | 85.7% | 42.0-99.2% | 95.4% | 75.1-99.7% | 85.7% | 42.0-99.2% | 95.5% | 75.1-99.7% | 93.1% | |||
Figure 5Empirical ROC curve.