scholarly journals Conspicuity of Malignant Pleural Mesothelioma in Contrast Enhanced MDCT – Arterial Phase or Late Phase?

Author(s):  
Lukas Luerken ◽  
Philipp Laurin Thurn ◽  
Florian Zeman ◽  
Christian Stroszczynski ◽  
Okka Wilkea Hamer

Abstract Background: To compare two different contrast phases intraindividually regarding conspicuity of MPM in chest MDCT. Methods: 28 patients with MPM were included in this retrospective study. For all patients, chest CT in standard arterial phase and abdominal CT in portal venous phase (scan delay ca. 70 s) was performed. First, subjective analysis of tumor conspicuity was done independently by two radiologists. Second, objective analysis was done by measuring Hounsfield units (HU) in tumor lesions and in the surrounding tissue in identical locations in both phases. Differences of absolute HUs in tumor lesions between phases and differences of contrast (HU in lesion – HU in surrounding tissue) between phases were determined. HU measurements were compared using paired t-test for related samples. Potential confounding effects by different technical and epidemiological parameters between phases were evaluated performing a multiple regression analysis.Results: Subjective analysis: In all 28 patients and for both readers conspicuity of MPM was better on late phase compared to arterial phase. Objective analysis: MPM showed a significantly higher absolute HU in late phase (75.4 vs 56.7 HU, p < 0.001). Contrast to surrounding tissue was also significantly higher in late phase (difference of contrast between phases 18.5 HU, SD 10.6 HU, p < 0.001). Multiple regression analysis revealed contrast phase and tube voltage to be the only significant independent predictors for tumor contrast.Conclusions: In contrast enhanced chest-MDCT for MPM late phase scanning seems to provide better conspicuity and higher contrast to surrounding tissue compared to standard arterial phase scans.

BMC Cancer ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Lukas Luerken ◽  
Philipp Laurin Thurn ◽  
Florian Zeman ◽  
Christian Stroszczynski ◽  
Okka Wilkea Hamer

Abstract Background To determine if late phase is superior to arterial phase intraindividually regarding conspicuity of MPM in contrast enhanced chest MDCT. Methods 28 patients with MPM were included in this retrospective study. For all patients, chest CT in standard arterial phase (scan delay ca. 35 s) and abdominal CT in portal venous phase (scan delay ca. 70 s) was performed. First, subjective analysis of tumor conspicuity was done independently by two radiologists. Second, objective analysis was done by measuring Hounsfield units (HU) in tumor lesions and in the surrounding tissue in identical locations in both phases. Differences of absolute HUs in tumor lesions between phases and differences of contrast (HU in lesion – HU in surrounding tissue) between phases were determined. HU measurements were compared using paired t-test for related samples. Potential confounding effects by different technical and epidemiological parameters between phases were evaluated performing a multiple regression analysis. Results Subjective analysis: In all 28 patients and for both readers conspicuity of MPM was better on late phase compared to arterial phase. Objective analysis: MPM showed a significantly higher absolute HU in late phase (75.4 vs 56.7 HU, p < 0.001). Contrast to surrounding tissue was also significantly higher in late phase (difference of contrast between phases 18.5 HU, SD 10.6 HU, p < 0.001). Multiple regression analysis revealed contrast phase and tube voltage to be the only significant independent predictors for tumor contrast. Conclusions In contrast enhanced chest-MDCT for MPM late phase scanning seems to provide better conspicuity and higher contrast to surrounding tissue compared to standard arterial phase scans.


2020 ◽  
Vol 71 (1) ◽  
pp. 220-222
Author(s):  
Melania Ardelean ◽  
Roxana Buzas ◽  
Daniel Lighezan ◽  
Basa Norina ◽  
Corina Duda-Seiman ◽  
...  

The aim of this study was to reveal the important role of CEUS in identifying correctly benign hepatic lesion vs a malignant one. We report a case of a diffuse hepatic steatosis particular sonographic aspect in a middle aged male presenting with general malaise. History revealed cardiac pathology, diabetes mellitus type 2 and chemotreated prostate neoplasia. The abdominal ultrasound (US) presented numerous hyperechoic lesions disseminated in the whole parenchyma. A contrast enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) of the lesions described an isoenhancement pattern of the lesions in the arterial phase, followed by the same aspect in the venous phase, with a high uptake pattern in the late phase. The CT and MRI also confirmed a diagnosis of a benign pathology. Hepatic steatosis may occur in chemotreated cancer patients, raising a suspicion of hepatic metastasis, but also due to the amount of lipid deposit distribution in the liver. Thus, CEUS was able to establish a correct diagnosis in a fast and reliable way.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Tianjiao Chen ◽  
Xiaoyan Chang ◽  
Ke Lv ◽  
Yong Wang ◽  
Xianshui Fu ◽  
...  

AbstractThe objective of this study was to illustrate our specific findings for intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (ICC) lesions on contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS). In this study, 21 patients at our hospitals with pathologically proven ICC and CEUS data were retrospectively enrolled. General clinical data of the patients, and features of lesions on conventional and contrast-enhanced ultrasound were recorded. Two experienced radiologists retrospectively reviewed all images by consensus. On gray-scale sonography, hypoechoic, isoechoic and hyperechoic lesions accounted for 85.7%, 9.5% and 4.8%, respectively, of all lesions. Hypovascular patterns were found for 95.2% of the lesions on color Doppler flow imaging. During the arterial phase of CEUS, heterogeneous hyperenhancement, homogeneous hyperenhancement, rim-like hyperenhancement, isoenhancement and hypoenhancement were observed for 61.9%, 19.0%, 9.5%, 4.8%, 4.8% of the lesions, respectively. During the portal venous and late phases, 85.7% and 95.2% of the lesions, respectively, exhibited hypoenhancement. In addition, 66.7% of the ICC lesions exhibited washed-out interiors but little decrease in enhancement at the periphery during the portal venous phase, resulting in the formation of a hyperenhanced peripheral rim. In conclusion, the rim sign in the portal venous phase of CEUS could help diagnose ICC. This trait could be related to the infiltrating growth pattern of ICC.


2019 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 15-17
Author(s):  
Tanita Suttichaimongkol ◽  
Kawin Tangvoraphonkchai ◽  
Arin Pisanuwongse

Cholangiocarcinoma is the second most common primary liver cancers. It is arising from epithelial cells of the biliary tract. It has been categorized to intrahepatic and extrahepatic. The Intrahepatic orperipheral cholangiocarcinoma can be presented as mass-forming, periductal infiltrating and intraductal growth. Many patients of mass-forming cholangiocarcinoma have symptoms such as abdominal pain about 85% but some patients don’t have any symptoms. This is the difficult cancer to diagnose. While patients were having any symptom, the disease was an advanced stage (unresectable). The diagnostic tools for assess this disease are imaging modalities include ultrasound (US), computed tomography (CT) with contrast, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) with contrast. However, the goal standard for confirm diagnosis is tissue pathology. This article showed a case presentation and reviewed the imaging appearance of mass-forming cholangiocarcinoma.   Figure 1  Axial non-contrast (A), axial contrast enhanced in arterial phase (B), axial contrast enhanced in portal venous phase (C) and axial contrast enhanced in 5-minute delay phase (D) CT scans show a large ill-defined hypodense mass at hepatic segment 7/8, about 7.0x7.0x5.0 cm in APxLxH diameter, which has poor enhancement on arterial phase with gradual progressive enhancement on portal venous and 5-minute delay phase. Coronal contrast enhanced in portal venous phase CT scan (E) shows mass confined in peripheral area of right hepatic lobe with hepatic vein abutment.


2018 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 402-410
Author(s):  
Norio Kubo ◽  
Norifumi Harimoto ◽  
Kenichiro Araki ◽  
Kei Hagiwara ◽  
Takahiro Yamanaka ◽  
...  

Hepatic epithelioid hemangioendothelioma (HEHE) is a rare tumor. Preoperative diagnosis of HEHE is difficult because it does not manifest specific symptoms or tumor markers. We report a resected case of small and solitary HEHE. The patient, a 74-year-old man, had undergone surgical resection for left renal cell carcinoma 20 years ago. During follow-up, a tumor approximately 1.3 cm in diameter was detected by computed tomography (CT) at liver segment VIII. It showed isodensity in the arterial phase, low density in the portal venous phase, and homogeneous enhancement in the late phase on CT and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). We performed hepatic resection of the right hepatic vein drainage area. A pathological diagnosis of HEHE was made. Although small and solitary HEHE is rare, an enhancement pattern in each phase on CT and MRI, using contrast media, can yield clues for the diagnosis of HEHE.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yong Zhu ◽  
Yingfan Mao ◽  
Jun Chen ◽  
Yudong Qiu ◽  
Yue Guan ◽  
...  

AbstractTo explore the value of contrast-enhanced CT texture analysis in predicting isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH) mutation status of intrahepatic cholangiocarcinomas (ICCs). Institutional review board approved this study. Contrast-enhanced CT images of 138 ICC patients (21 with IDH mutation and 117 without IDH mutation) were retrospectively reviewed. Texture analysis was performed for each lesion and compared between ICCs with and without IDH mutation. All textural features in each phase and combinations of textural features (p < 0.05) by Mann–Whitney U tests were separately used to train multiple support vector machine (SVM) classifiers. The classification generalizability and performance were evaluated using a tenfold cross-validation scheme. Among plain, arterial phase (AP), portal venous phase (VP), equilibrium phase (EP) and Sig classifiers, VP classifier showed the highest accuracy of 0.863 (sensitivity, 0.727; specificity, 0.885), with a mean area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.813 in predicting IDH mutation in validation cohort. Texture features of CT images in portal venous phase could predict IDH mutation status of ICCs with SVM classifier preoperatively.


Diagnostics ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 141
Author(s):  
Hiroshi Takahashi ◽  
Katsutoshi Sugimoto ◽  
Naohisa Kamiyama ◽  
Kentaro Sakamaki ◽  
Tatsuya Kakegawa ◽  
...  

The aim of this study was to compare the diagnostic performance of Contrast-Enhanced US Liver Imaging Reporting and Data System (CEUS LI-RADS) version 2017, which includes portal- and late-phase washout as a major imaging feature, with that of modified CEUS LI-RADS, which includes Kupffer-phase findings as a major imaging feature. Participants at risk of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) with treatment-naïve hepatic lesions (≥1 cm) were recruited and underwent Sonazoid-enhanced US. Arterial phase hyperenhancement (APHE), washout time, and echogenicity in the Kupffer phase were evaluated using both criteria. The diagnostic performance of both criteria was analyzed using the McNemar test. The evaluation was performed on 102 participants with 102 lesions (HCCs (n = 52), non-HCC malignancies (n = 36), and benign (n = 14)). Among 52 HCCs, non-rim APHE was observed in 92.3% (48 of 52). By 5 min, 73.1% (38 of 52) of HCCs showed mild washout, while by 10 min or in the Kupffer phase, 90.4% (47 of 52) of HCCs showed hypoenhancement. The sensitivity (67.3%; 35 of 52; 95% CI: 52.9%, 79.7%) of modified CEUS LI-RADS criteria was higher than that of CEUS LI-RADS criteria (51.9%; 27 of 52; 95% CI: 37.6%, 66.0%) (p = 0.0047). In conclusion, non-rim APHE with hypoenhancement in the Kupffer phase on Sonazoid-enhanced US is a feasible criterion for diagnosing HCC.


Heart ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 105 (4) ◽  
pp. 275-322 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rory O’Donohoe ◽  
Samantha Fitzsimmons ◽  
Timothy J C Bryant

Clinical introductionA woman in her 30s presented to the emergency department with sudden-onset abdominal pain with hypotension and tachycardia. She gave a history of congenital heart disease for which she had previously undergone multiple operations. On examination she demonstrated right upper quadrant tenderness. She underwent an urgent multiphase CT (figure 1A–C).Figure 1(A) Arterial phase coronal CT. (B) Arterial phase axial CT. (C) Portal venous phase axial CT.QuestionWhat is the underlying liver pathology?Hepatocellular adenomaCholangiocarcinomaHepatocellular carcinomaFocal nodular hyperplasiaHepatoblastoma


Author(s):  
Christine U. Lee ◽  
James F. Glockner

37-year-old woman with a history of recurrent pancreatitis and abdominal pain Arterial phase (Figure 5.6.1A), portal venous phase (Figure 5.6.1B), equilibrium phase (Figure 5.6.1C), and 8-minute delayed phase (Figure 5.6.1D) postgadolinium 3D SPGR images show multiple splenic lesions that are initially hypoenhancing relative to adjacent spleen and become hyperintense on delayed images....


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