Role of Triple Phase Computed Tomography in the Evaluation of Liver Lesions
Introduction: Wide range of benign and malignant tumours can occur in the liver, the largest organ in our body. So far, the histopathological diagnosis was considered the gold standard with the limitation of it being invasive. However, the advances in the radiological imaging techniques would su...
Main Authors: | , , |
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
JCDR Research and Publications Pvt. Ltd.
2021-04-01
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Series: | International Journal of Anatomy Radiology and Surgery |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://www.ijars.net/articles/PDF/2644/48188_CE_F(SHU)_PF1(AKA_SHU)_PN(KM).pdf |
Summary: | Introduction: Wide range of benign and malignant tumours
can occur in the liver, the largest organ in our body. So far, the
histopathological diagnosis was considered the gold standard
with the limitation of it being invasive. However, the advances
in the radiological imaging techniques would surpass this
difficulty, as well helps in coming to a close, if not many times the
definitive diagnosis, thus preventing these invasive diagnostic
procedures.
Aim: To assess the role of triple phase Computed Tomography
(CT) in the evaluation of liver lesions by evaluating the enhancing
characteristics and comparing the findings with ultrasound,
Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI), Biopsy and follow-up as
applicable during the study period.
Materials and Methods: This is a longitudinal prospective
study conducted at Kamineni Institute of Medical Sciences,
Narketpally, on 60 selected subjects for a period of 12 months,
during July 2017 to July 2018. Patients of age more than 20
years of both gender with clinical suspicion or inconclusively
diagnosed liver lesions were selected. These patients are
evaluated using standard triple phase contrast CT liver protocol
on 16 slice multidetector CT scan. The different enhancing
patterns were inspected and compared to USG, MRI and Biopsy
as applicable. All the collected data were tabulated in Microsoft
excel sheet and were analysed in SPSS Software version 21.
Results: The study consisted of 60 patients with 35 male and
25 female and assessed a total of 200 individual liver lesions.
Out of which, 141 were malignant and 59 benign. Metastasis
being the most common (n=113), followed by Hepatocellular
Carcinoma (HCA) (n=26) and intrahepatic Cholangiocarcinoma
(CCA) (n=2) in malignant lesions and Haemangioma (n=26) was
the commonest benign lesion followed by cysts (n=20), abscess
(n=10), Focal Nodular Hyperplasia (FNH) (n=2) and adenoma
(n=1). In total, there were 112 (56%) hypovascular lesions and
88 hypervascular lesions (44%), with 11 enhancement patterns
which are correlated to standards of reference satisfactorily. The
study shows triple phase CT is 100% sensitive in diagnosing
abscess, simple cysts, FNH and intrahepatic CCA and showed
varied sensitivities with other lesions like HCC (sensitivity-79%),
Haemangioma (sensitivity-92.3%), Metastasis (sensitivity91.1%), however, it showed 100% specificity in diagnosing
all the cases when there was typical enhancement pattern for
the individual lesion concerned. The four benign enhancement
patterns and five malignant enhancement patterns were noted
along with hypo/hypo/hypo, hypo/hypo/hyper and hyper/A/A
patterns which needs cautious interpretation.
Conclusion: We recommend triple phase CT scan as a
standard first line procedure with high sensitivity, specificity
and accuracy in differentiating benign and malignant liver
lesions and avoiding unnecessary biopsies. Hepatic Arterial
Phase (HAP) is used in identifying small hypervascular lesions
and Porto-Venous Phase (PVP) in detecting small hypovascular
lesions. Particularly in HCC, triple phase CT provides additional
information of vascular invasions, arterioportal shunts, capsular
delineation and vascular road map for pre-surgical evaluation. |
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ISSN: | 2277-8543 2455-6874 |