| Literature DB >> 33855588 |
D Strobel1, E-M Jung2, M Ziesch3, M Praktiknjo4, A Link5, C F Dietrich6, C Klinger7, M Schultheiß8, D Jesper1, B Schellhaas9,10.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) can be diagnosed non-invasively with contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) in cirrhosis if the characteristic pattern of arterial phase hyperenhancement followed by hypoenhancement is present. Recent studies suggest that diagnosis based on this "hyper-hypo" pattern needs further refinement. This study compares the diagnostic accuracies of standardized CEUS for HCC according to the current guideline definition and following the newly developed CEUS algorithms (CEUS LI-RADS®, ESCULAP) in a prospective multicenter real-life setting.Entities:
Keywords: Carcinoma, hepatocellular; Contrast media; Diagnostic imaging; Liver; Ultrasonography
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33855588 PMCID: PMC8452566 DOI: 10.1007/s00330-021-07872-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Radiol ISSN: 0938-7994 Impact factor: 5.315
Fig. 1Study design with the inclusion and exclusion criteria, and the clinical and imaging data collected
Information retrieved from online entry forms of the DEGUM CEUS HCC study. Summarizes the information collected via the online entry forms. Examiners collected clinical and imaging data according to the categories displayed and entered them via personalized password-protected accounts
Participating center Ultrasound device used Examiner Date of examination Automatically generated case number | |
Age Gender Risk factor for HCC Presence of liver cirrhosis Known extrahepatic malignancy Diabetes mellitus General condition (ECOG) | |
Imaging quality Conditions of liver parenchyma (cirrhosis, steatosis, uncharacteristic changes, normal parenchyma) Presence of portal vein thrombosis Presence of transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic stent shunt (TIPS) Number of focal liver lesions Size of target lesion Echotexture of target lesion Presence of hypoechoic rim Macroinvasion of liver vessels Findings within Milan criteria [ | |
Imaging quality Application of second contrast bolus Enhancement behavior of the index lesion relative to the surrounding parenchyma: In the arterial phase at 1 min at 3 min After 4–6 min in the case of no washout at 3 min Presence of enhancing tumor thrombus On-site diagnosis according to CEUS | |
Histology: Histological findings from index lesion (including grading in case of HCC) Histological findings from liver parenchyma MRI findings CT findings |
Categorization of the index lesion according to the standardized CEUS algorithms ESCULAP and CEUS LI-RADS®
Patient characteristics (n = 470 cirrhotic patients)
| 389/81 (82.8%/17.2%) | |
| 67.1 ± 10.3 | |
| 69 (14.7%) | |
| 174 (37%) | |
| ECOG 0 | 288 (61.3%) |
| ECOG 1–2 | 171 (36.4%) |
| ECOG 3–4 | 11 (2.3%) |
Table 2 summarizes the clinical data of the 470 cirrhotic patients enrolled into the study
SD, standard deviation; HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma; ECOG, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status
Findings from B-mode ultrasound and color mode (n = 470)
| Number of lesions | |
| Solitary lesion | 274 (58.3%) |
| 2–3 lesions | 106 (22.6%) |
| > 3 lesions | 49 (10.4%) |
| Diffuse tumor infiltration | 41 (8.7%) |
| 52 ± 111 | |
| ≤ 10 mm | 11 (2.3%) |
| 11–20 mm | 73 (15.5%) |
| 21–50 mm | 244 (51.9%) |
| ≥ 50 mm | 142 (34.9%) |
| Hypoechoic | 280 (59.6%) |
| Isoechoic | 100 (21.3%) |
| Hyperechoic | 90 (19.1%) |
| 128 (27.2%) | |
| 220 (46.8%) | |
| 61 (13%) | |
| 36 (10.3%) | |
| 9 (2.6%) | |
Table 3 shows findings from B-mode ultrasound and color mode in the 470 cirrhotic patients. Both ultrasound characteristics of the focal liver lesions and of the liver parenchyma were recorded
SD, standard deviation; TIPSS, transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic stent shunt
Diagnostic accuracy of different modalities compared to the reference standard
| Modality | Sensitivity | Specificity | PPV* | NPV* | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CEUS on-site (subjective) | 378 | 92 | 91.5% [88.7%; 94.3%] | 67.4% [57.8%; 77%] | 92% [89.3%; 94.8%] | 66% [56.4%; 75.5%] |
| CEUS guidelines (hyper-hypo) | 378 | 92 | 74.3% [69.9%; 78.7%] | 63% [53.2%; 72.9%] | 89.2% [85.8%; 92.6%] | 37.4% [29.8%; 45%] |
| ESCULAP | 279 | 70 | 95% [92.4%; 97.5%] | 51.4% [39.7%; 63.1%] | 88.6% [85%; 92.2%] | 72% [59.6%; 84.4%] |
| CEUS LI-RADS© | 279 | 70 | 65.2% [59.6%; 70.8%] | 78.6% [69%; 88.2%] | 92.4% [88.7%; 96.1%] | 36.2% [28.5%; 43.8%] |
*Relating to a prevalence of 80%
Table 4 shows the diagnostic accuracies of the different modalities tested in direct comparison (CEUS subjective; CEUS following the guidelines (“hyper-hypo” pattern); and the two standardized CEUS algorithms, ESCULAP and CEUS LI-RADS®). The normal approximation interval was used for 95% confidence intervals
HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma; PPV, positive predictive value; NPV, negative predictive value; CEUS, contrast-enhanced ultrasound; ESCULAP, Erlanger Synopsis for Contrast-Enhanced Ultrasound for Liver lesion Assessment in Patients at risk; CEUS LI-RADS©, Contrast-Enhanced UltraSound Liver Imaging Reporting and Data System
Fig. 2Representative CEUS images. a ESCULAP-1/CEUS-LR-3 lesion. A1 B-mode: hyperechoic lesion of 11 mm in liver segment VII. A2–A5 CEUS. The lesion shows arterial phase hyperenhancement (A2) with sustained hyperenhancement in the portal venous phase (A3) and late phase after 3 min (A4) and > 4 min (A5), corresponding to a benign lesion. b ESCULAP-3/CEUS-LR-5 lesion. B1 B-mode: hypoechoic lesion of 27 mm in a cirrhotic patient. B2–5 CEUS: homogenous hyperenhancement of the lesion in the arterial phase (B2), followed by isoenhancement in the portal venous phase (B3) and slight hypoenhancement in the late phase after 3 min (B4) and > 4 min (B5). c ESCULAP-C/CEUS-LR-M lesion, histologically HCC G2 in cirrhotic liver. This lesion was misclassified by both algorithms. C1 B-mode: almost isoechoic lesion of 25 mm with a hypoechoic rim. C2 Color mode: no hypervascularization visible. C3–C6 CEUS: in the arterial phase, the lesion shows a rim enhancement with central hypoenhancement (C3–C4), followed by rapid and marked contrast washout in the portal venous phase (C5) and late phase (C6). Typical finding of iCCA; however, histologically proven HCC