Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/10553/71941
Title: | Primary and post-chemoradiotherapy MRI detection of extramural venous invasion in rectal cancer: the role of diffusion-weighted imaging | Authors: | Fornell-Perez, Roberto Vivas-Escalona, Valentina Aranda-Sanchez, Joel Gonzalez-Dominguez, M. Carmen Rubio-Garcia, Jano Alemán-Flores, Patricia Lozano-Rodriguez, Alvaro Porcel-de-Peralta, Gabriela Loro Ferrer, Juan Francisco |
UNESCO Clasification: | 320101 Oncología 320111 Radiología |
Keywords: | Vascular Invasion Prognostic-Significance Chemotherapy Metastasis Disease, et al |
Issue Date: | 2020 | Journal: | Radiologia Medica | Abstract: | Objective: To assess the added value of diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) to high-resolution T2-weighted sequences (HRT2w) in MRI detection of extramural venous infiltration (EMVI), according to the previous experience of radiologists. Methods: A cross-sectional study of a retrospective database including 1.5 T MRI records from 100 patients with biopsy-proven rectal cancer (2011-2016; 75 male/25 female, average 63 y/o), which included primary staging (54) and post-chemoradiotherapy follow-up MRIs (46). The reference standard was histology of surgical specimens. All cases were individually blindly reviewed by ten radiologists: three specialists in abdominal radiology, three specialized in different areas and four residents. In each case, the presence of EMVI was assessed twice: first, using just HRT2w; second, with DWI added to HRT2w. The results were pooled by experience, analyzing sensitivity, specificity, accuracy (area under ROC curve), likelihood ratios, predictive values and overstaging/understaging. Results Addition of DWI improved diagnostic performance by specialists radiologists, particularly post-chemoradiotherapy (accuracy 0.74-0.84; positive likelihood ratio 3.9-9.1; overstaging 16-8%), less so at primary staging (specificity 76-87.2%; overstaging 21-11%). Non-specialist radiologists also improved, but only at primary staging (accuracy 0.59-0.63). Residents showed small changes, except for notably increased sensitivity in both primary staging (35.7-43%) and post-chemoradiotherapy (41.7-58.3%) staging, at the expense of increased overstaging. Conclusions: The addition of DWI improved the diagnostic performance of EMVI by experienced radiologists, downgrading overstaging, especially in post-chemoradiotherapy follow-up. It resulted in fewer changes for inexperienced radiologists (enhanced primary staging) and residents (increased sensitivity). | URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10553/71941 | ISSN: | 0033-8362 | DOI: | 10.1007/s11547-020-01137-7 | Source: | Radiologia Medica [ISSN 0033-8362], v. 125, p. 522–530 |
Appears in Collections: | Artículos |
WEB OF SCIENCETM
Citations
49
checked on Nov 17, 2024
Page view(s)
97
checked on Jan 27, 2024
Google ScholarTM
Check
Altmetric
Share
Export metadata
Items in accedaCRIS are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.