PMID: 9445147Jan 28, 1998Paper

Overestimation ratio of hepatic lesion size on spiral CT arterial portography: an indicator of malignancy

Radiation Medicine
M KanematsuH Nakamura

Abstract

To assess the reliability of the size-overestimation ratio obtained from spiral CT arterial portography (CTAP) and spiral equilibrium-phase CT (EPCT) in distinguishing malignant focal hepatic lesions from benign ones. The CTAP images and EPCT images obtained five minutes after CTAP in 39 patients with focal hepatic lesions were retrospectively analyzed. Fifty-eight lesions (hepatocellular carcinoma [HCC], 33; metastasis, 10; liver cyst, 10; cavernous hemangioma, 2; adenomatous hyperplasia [AH], 2; focal nodular hyperplasia [FNH], 1) had their sizes measured on CTAP and EPCT images using the calipers on the CT console. The size-overestimation ratios (CTAP/EPCT) were 1.24+/-0.15 in HCC, 1.28+/-0.26 in metastasis, 1.02+/-0.23 in liver cyst, 0.98+/-0.34 in cavernous hemangioma, 0.94+/-0.39 in AH, and 1.00 in FNH. Mean size-overestimation ratios for benign- and malignant-lesion groups were 1.00+/-0.37 and 1.25+/-0.18, respectively (p < 0.0001). When a cutoff level was set at 1.05, sensitivity and specificity for malignancy were 91% and 93%, respectively. In comparison with EPCT, CTAP significantly overestimates the size of malignant hepatic tumors. This phenomenon may be an indicator of hepatic malignancy.

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