AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focuses on improving early detection and diagnosis of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) by comparing the effectiveness of two types of contrast agents—hepatobiliary specific contrast (HBSC) and extracellular contrast agent (ECA)—in high-risk patients.
  • Researchers evaluated 247 hepatic nodules from 222 patients, engaging three experienced radiologists to analyze imaging features and assess diagnostic performance based on different criteria against histopathological results.
  • Results showed that ECA-MRI using the hallmark "AP + PVP and/or DP" had decent sensitivity and specificity, while HBSC-MRI with "DWI + HBP" performed better in sensitivity for smaller nodules, indicating that tailored

Article Abstract

Objective: Early detection and diagnosis of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is essential for prognosis; however, the imaging hallmarks for tumor detection and diagnosis has remained the same for years despite the use of many new immerging imaging methods. This study aimed to evaluate the detection performance of hepatic nodules in high risk patients using either hepatobiliary specific contrast (HBSC) agent or extracellular contrast agent (ECA), and further to compare the diagnostic performances for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) using different diagnostic criteria with the histopathological results as reference standard.

Methods: This prospective study included 247 nodules in 222 patients (mean age, 53.32 ± 10.84 years; range, 22-79 years). The detection performance and imaging features of each nodule were evaluated in all MR sequences by three experienced abdominal radiologists. The detection performance of each nodule on all MR sequences were compared and further the diagnostic performance of various diagnostic criteria were evaluated.

Results: For those patients who underwent ECA-MRI, the conventional imaging hallmark of "AP + PVP and/or DP" was recommended, as 60.19% diagnostic sensitivity, 80.95% specificity and 100% lesion detection rate. Additionally, for those patients who underwent HBSC-MRI, the diagnostic criteria of "DWI + HBP" was recommended. This diagnostic criteria demonstrated, both in all tumor size and for nodules ≤2 cm, higher sensitivity (93.07 and 90.16%, all p <0.05, respectively) and slightly lower specificity (64.71 and 87.50%, all p >0.05, respectively) than that of the European Association for the Study of the Liver (EASL) criteria.

Conclusions: Different abbreviated MR protocols were recommended for patients using either ECA or HBSC. These provided imaging settings demonstrated high lesion detection rate and diagnostic performance for HCC.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8959840PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2022.812832DOI Listing

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