AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aims to evaluate if single-phase contrast-enhanced dual-energy quantitative spectral analysis offers better diagnostic accuracy for small renal lesions than traditional single-energy methods.
  • The research involved 136 patients with 144 renal lesions and compared various attenuation measurements between benign and malignant cases using advanced CT techniques.
  • Results indicated that the new method significantly enhanced specificity in identifying malignant lesions, achieving 93% specificity compared to 81% with conventional methods, highlighting its potential to improve clinical diagnosis.

Article Abstract

Objective: The purpose of this study is to determine whether single-phase contrast-enhanced dual-energy quantitative spectral analysis improves the accuracy of diagnosis of small (< 4.0 cm) renal lesions, compared with conventional single-energy attenuation measurements.

Materials And Methods: In this retrospective study, 136 consecutive patients (95 men and 41 women; mean age, 54 years) with 144 renal lesions (111 benign and 33 malignant) underwent single-energy unenhanced and dual-energy contrast-enhanced CT of the abdomen. For each renal lesion, attenuation measurements were obtained, and an attenuation change of 15 HU or greater was considered evidence of enhancement. Dual-energy spectral attenuation curves were generated for each lesion. The slope of each curve was measured between 40 and 50 keV (λHU), 40 and 70 keV (λHU), and 40 and 140 keV (λHU). Mean lesion attenuation values and spectral attenuation curve parameters were compared between benign and malignant renal lesions by use of the two-sample t test. Diagnostic accuracy was assessed and validated using cross-validation analysis.

Results: With the use of cross-validated optimal thresholds at 100% sensitivity, specificity for differentiating between benign and malignant renal lesions improved significantly when both λHU and λHU were used, compared with conventional enhancement measurements (93% [103/111; 95% CI, 86-97%] vs 81% [90/111; 95% CI, 73-88%]) (p = 0.02). The sensitivity of λHU and λHU was also higher than that of conventional enhancement measurements, although it was not statistically significant.

Conclusion: Single-phase contrast-enhanced dual-energy quantitative spectral analysis significantly improves the specificity for characterization of small (< 4.0 cm) renal lesions, compared with conventional single-energy attenuation measurements.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.2214/AJR.17.17824DOI Listing

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