Arterial phase CT improves detection of colorectal liver metastases: evaluation of the downslope injection method
摘要
To evaluate whether arterial phase CT using the downslope injection method improves the detection of liver metastases from colorectal cancer (LMCC) compared with portal venous phase (PVP) imaging alone.
Materials and methodsThis retrospective study included 57 patients with 180 confirmed LMCC lesions who underwent CT using the downslope injection method. Early arterial phase (EAP, 25 s) and late arterial phase (LAP, 40 s) images were evaluated by three radiologists for lesion detection and enhancement patterns. Detection rates were compared using generalized estimating equations with PVP as reference.
ResultsAmong 180 LMCC, 42 (23%) were hyperenhancing, 78 (43%) ring-enhancing, 50 (28%) hypoenhancing, and 10 (6%) not detectable on arterial phases. Small lesions (≤ 10 mm) showed the highest proportion of arterial hyperenhancement (42%). LAP images (162/180, 90%) significantly outperformed PVP alone (143/180, 79%; odds ratio 2.29; 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.05–4.98; p = 0.037). For hyperenhancing lesions, EAP (86%; p = 0.011) and LAP (81%; p = 0.024) demonstrated significantly higher sensitivity than PVP (52%). Interobserver agreement was moderate to good for detectability (κ = 0.64–0.77) and almost perfect for enhancement pattern classification (Cohen’s κ = 0.87–0.95).
ConclusionAdding arterial phase CT using the downslope injection method to PVP significantly improves the detection of LMCC, particularly small hyperenhancing lesions.
Key Points