AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study aims to compare the effectiveness of positive oral contrast material (iohexol) versus neutral oral contrast (water) in detecting malignant tumors in non-solid intra-abdominal organs using CT scans in a cohort of 265 patients who initially had no signs of malignancy reported.
  • - A radiologist analyzed the CT images for the visibility of malignant deposits and determined that 58.1% of examinations actually showed signs of malignancy upon unblinded review.
  • - Findings indicated that the negative predictive value (NPV) for detecting malignant deposits was significantly higher when adequate bowel filling was achieved with positive oral contrast, compared to both inadequately filled cases with positive contrast and any cases using neutral contrast, suggesting that positive contrast is

Article Abstract

Data are limited regarding utility of positive oral contrast material for peritoneal tumor detection on CT. The purpose of this article is to compare positive versus neutral oral contrast material for detection of malignant deposits in nonsolid intraabdominal organs on CT. This retrospective study included 265 patients (133 men, 132 women; median age, 61 years) who underwent an abdominopelvic CT examination in which the report did not suggest presence of malignant deposits and a subsequent CT examination within 6 months in which the report indicated at least one unequivocal malignant deposit. Examinations used positive (iohexol; = 100) or neutral (water; = 165) oral agents. A radiologist reviewed images to assess whether the deposits were visible (despite clinical reports indicating no deposits) on unblinded comparison with the follow-up examinations; identified deposits were assigned to one of seven intraabdominal compartments. The radiologist also assessed adequacy of bowel filling with oral contrast material. Two additional radiologists independently reviewed examinations in blinded fashion for malignant deposits. NPV was assessed of clinical CT reports and blinded retrospective readings for detection of malignant deposits visible on unblinded comparison with follow-up examinations. Unblinded review identified malignant deposits in 58.1% (154/265) of examinations. In per-patient analysis of clinical reports, NPV for malignant deposits was higher for examinations with adequate bowel filling with positive oral contrast material (65.8% [25/38]) than for examinations with inadequate bowel filling with positive oral contrast material (45.2% [28/62], = .07) or with neutral oral contrast material regardless of bowel filling adequacy (35.2% [58/165], = .002). In per-compartment analysis of blinded interpretations, NPV was higher for examinations with adequate and inadequate bowel filling with positive oral contrast material than for examinations with neutral oral contrast regardless of bowel filling adequacy (reader 1: 94.7% [234/247] and 92.5% [382/413] vs 88.3% [947/1072], both = .045; reader 2: 93.1% [228/245] and 91.6% [361/394] vs 85.9% [939/1093], both = .01). CT has suboptimal NPV for malignant deposits in intraabdominal nonsolid organs. Compared with neutral material, positive oral contrast material improves detection, particularly with adequate bowel filling. Optimization of bowel preparation for oncologic CT may help avoid potentially severe clinical consequences of missed malignant deposits.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.2214/AJR.21.27319DOI Listing

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