TY - JOUR
T1 - Liver CT for vascular mapping during radioembolisation workup
T2 - comparison of an early and late arterial phase protocol
AU - van den Hoven, Andor F
AU - Braat, Manon N G J A
AU - Prince, Jip F
AU - van Doormaal, Pieter J
AU - van Leeuwen, Maarten S
AU - Lam, Marnix G E H
AU - van den Bosch, Maurice A A J
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2016, The Author(s).
PY - 2017/1
Y1 - 2017/1
N2 - Objectives: To compare right gastric (RGA) and segment 4 artery (A4) origin detection rates during radioembolisation workup between early and late arterial phase liver CT protocols. Methods: 100 consecutive patients who underwent liver CT between May 2012–January 2015 with early or late arterial phase protocol (n = 50 each, 10- vs. 20-s post-threshold delay) were included. RGA/A4 origin detection rates, assessed by two raters, and contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) of the hepatic artery relative to the portal vein were compared between the protocols. Results: The first–second rater scored the RGA origin as visible in 58–65 % (specific proportion of agreement 82 %, κ = 0.62); A4 origin in 96–89 % (94 %, κ = 0.54). Thirty-six percent of RGA origins not detectable by DSA were identified on CT. Origin detection rates were not significantly different for early/late arterial phases. Mean CNR was higher in the early arterial phase protocol (1.7 vs. 1.2, p < 0.001). Conclusion: A 10-s delay arterial phase CT protocol does not significantly improve detection of small intra- and extrahepatic branches. RGA origin detection requires further optimization, whereas A4/MHA origin detection is adequate, with good inter-rater reproducibility. CT remains important for preprocedural planning, because it may reveal arterial anatomy not discernible on DSA. Key Points: • An early arterial phase does not significantly improve RGA and A4/MHA origin detection. • RGA origin detection (58–65 %) on CT is still suboptimal. • 36 % of RGA origins undetectable on DSA can be identified on CT. • A4/MHA origin detection (89–96 %) on CT is excellent. • Inter-rater reproducibility is good for RGA and A4/MHA origin detection on CT.
AB - Objectives: To compare right gastric (RGA) and segment 4 artery (A4) origin detection rates during radioembolisation workup between early and late arterial phase liver CT protocols. Methods: 100 consecutive patients who underwent liver CT between May 2012–January 2015 with early or late arterial phase protocol (n = 50 each, 10- vs. 20-s post-threshold delay) were included. RGA/A4 origin detection rates, assessed by two raters, and contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) of the hepatic artery relative to the portal vein were compared between the protocols. Results: The first–second rater scored the RGA origin as visible in 58–65 % (specific proportion of agreement 82 %, κ = 0.62); A4 origin in 96–89 % (94 %, κ = 0.54). Thirty-six percent of RGA origins not detectable by DSA were identified on CT. Origin detection rates were not significantly different for early/late arterial phases. Mean CNR was higher in the early arterial phase protocol (1.7 vs. 1.2, p < 0.001). Conclusion: A 10-s delay arterial phase CT protocol does not significantly improve detection of small intra- and extrahepatic branches. RGA origin detection requires further optimization, whereas A4/MHA origin detection is adequate, with good inter-rater reproducibility. CT remains important for preprocedural planning, because it may reveal arterial anatomy not discernible on DSA. Key Points: • An early arterial phase does not significantly improve RGA and A4/MHA origin detection. • RGA origin detection (58–65 %) on CT is still suboptimal. • 36 % of RGA origins undetectable on DSA can be identified on CT. • A4/MHA origin detection (89–96 %) on CT is excellent. • Inter-rater reproducibility is good for RGA and A4/MHA origin detection on CT.
KW - Acquisition protocol
KW - Arterial phase
KW - Liver CT
KW - Radioembolisation
KW - SIRT
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84964211479&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s00330-016-4343-1
DO - 10.1007/s00330-016-4343-1
M3 - Article
C2 - 27108297
SN - 0938-7994
VL - 27
SP - 61
EP - 69
JO - European Radiology
JF - European Radiology
IS - 1
ER -