How and why should the radiologist look at the placenta?Abstract
This editorial comment refers to the article “Identification of suspicious invasive placentation based on clinical MRI data using textural features and automated machine learning” by Sun et al. in European Radiology.
Key Points
• Understanding how the placenta works is one of the major challenges facing radiologists.
• New perspectives are opening up for MRI studies of the placenta.
• The authors propose a new approach to placental MRI based on texture analysis and machine learning.
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Can IVIM help predict HCC recurrence after hepatectomy?AbstractPurpose
To determine the diagnostic performance of intravoxel incoherent motion (IVIM) parameters to predict tumor recurrence after hepatectomy in patients with hepatitis B virus (HBV)–related hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC).
Materials and methods
One hundred and fifty-seven patients (mean age 52.54 ± 11.32 years, 87% male) with surgically and pathologically confirmed HCC were included. Regions of interests were drawn including the tumors by two independent radiologists. ADC and IVIM-derived parameters (true diffusion coefficient [D]; pseudodiffusion coefficient [D*]; pseudodiffusion fraction [f]) were obtained preoperatively. The Cox proportional hazards model was used to analyze the predictors associated with tumor recurrence after hepatectomy.
Results
Forty-seven of 157 (29.9%) patients experienced tumor recurrence. The multivariate Cox proportional hazards model revealed that a D value < 0.985 × 10−3 mm2/s (hazard ratio (HR), 0.190; p = 0.023) was a risk factor for tumor recurrence. Additional risk factors included younger age (HR, 0.328; p = 0.034) and higher serum alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) level (HR, 2.079; p = 0.013). Further, receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis showed that the area under the curve (AUC) of the obtained Cox regression model improved from 0.68 for the combination of AFP and age alone to 0.724 for the combination of D value, AFP, and age.
Conclusion
The D value derived from the IVIM model is a potential biomarker for the preoperative prediction of recurrence after hepatectomy in patients with HCC. When combined with age and AFP levels, D can improve the predictive performance for tumor recurrence.
Key Points
• The recurrence rate of HCC after hepatectomy was higher in patients with ADC, D, and f values that were lower than the optimal cutoff values.
• The optimal cutoff values of ADC, D, D*, and f for predicting recurrence in HBV associated HCC were 0.858 × 10−3 mm2/s, 0.985 × 10−3 mm2/s, 12.5 × 10−3 mm2/s, and 23.4%, respectively.
• The D value derived from IVIM diffusion-weighted imaging may be a useful biomarker for preoperative prediction of recurrence after hepatectomy in patients with HCC. When combined with age and AFP levels, D can improve the predictive performance for tumor recurrence.
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Radial MP2RAGE sequence for rapid 3D T 1 mapping of mouse abdomen: application to hepatic metastasesAbstractObjectives
The T1 longitudinal recovery time is regarded as a biomarker of cancer treatment efficiency. In this scope, the Magnetization Prepared 2 RApid Gradient Echo (MP2RAGE) sequence relevantly complies with fast 3D T1 mapping. Nevertheless, with its Cartesian encoding scheme, it is very sensitive to respiratory motion. Consequently, a radial encoding scheme was implemented for the detection and T1 measurement of hepatic metastases in mice at 7T.
Methods
A 3D radial encoding scheme was developed using a golden angle distribution for the k-space trajectories. As in that case, each projection contributes to the image contrast, the signal equations had to be modified. Phantoms containing increasing gadoteridol concentrations were used to determine the accuracy of the sequence in vitro. Healthy mice were repetitively scanned to assess the reproducibility of the T1 values. The growth of hepatic metastases was monitored. Undersampling robustness was also evaluated.
Results
The accuracy of the T1 values obtained with the radial MP2RAGE sequence was > 90% compared to the Inversion-Recovery sequence. The motion robustness of this new sequence also enabled repeatable T1 measurements on abdominal organs. Hepatic metastases of less than 1-mm diameter were easily detected and T1 heterogeneities within the metastasis and between the metastases within the same animal were measured. With a twofold acceleration factor using undersampling, high-quality 3D T1 abdominal maps were achieved in 9 min.
Conclusions
The radial MP2RAGE sequence could be used for fast 3D T1 mapping, to detect and characterize metastases in regions subjected to respiratory motion.
Key Points
• The Cartesian encoding of the MP2RAGE sequence was modified to a radial encoding. The modified sequence enabled accurate T 1 measurements on phantoms and on abdominal organs of mice.
• Hepatic metastases were easily detected due to high contrast. Heterogeneity in T 1 was measured within the metastases and between each metastasis within the same animal.
• As implementation of this sequence does not require specific hardware, we expect that it could be readily available for clinical practice in humans.
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Lipiodol deposition in portal vein tumour thrombus predicts treatment outcome in HCC patients after transarterial chemoembolisationAbstractObjective
To study lipiodol deposition in portal vein tumour thrombus (PVTT) in predicting the treatment outcome of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) patients after transarterial chemoembolisation (TACE).
Methods
We retrospectively reviewed data from 379 HCC patients with PVTT who underwent TACE as the initial treatment at Sun Yat-Sen University Cancer Center from January 2008 to December 2015. Patients were grouped by positive and negative lipiodol deposition based on the extent of lipiodol deposition in PVTT. The overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS) were compared between negative and positive lipiodol deposition groups; furthermore, the value of the combinatorial evaluation of tumour responses and lipiodol deposition in PVTT in predicting prognosis was analysed in subgroup patients with stable disease (SD) after TACE.
Results
Of the 379 patients, 264 (69.7%) had negative and 115 (30.3%) had positive lipiodol deposition in PVTT after TACE. Multivariate analysis identified positive lipiodol deposition in PVTT as an independent prognostic factor for favourable OS (p = 0.001). The median OS and PFS of negative and positive lipiodol deposition groups were 4.70 vs. 8.97 months (p = 0.001) and 3.1 months vs. 5.8 months (p < 0.001). In subgroup patients, the median OS and PFS of negative and positive lipiodol deposition groups were 4.7 months vs. 10.5 months (p < 0.001) and 3.5 months vs. 7.0 months (p < 0.001), respectively.
Conclusions
The patients with positive lipiodol deposition in PVTT had a longer OS than those with negative lipiodol deposition. Furthermore, the positive lipiodol deposition in PVTT can further differentiate HCC patients with favourable prognosis from SD patients.
Key Points
• Lipiodol deposition in PVTT is a prognostic indicator for HCC patients after TACE treatment.
• Positive lipiodol deposition in PVTT is associated with a better prognosis.
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Carotid plaque composition by CT angiography in asymptomatic subjects: a head-to-head comparison to ultrasoundAbstractObjectives
To describe carotid plaque composition by computed tomography angiography (CTA) in asymptomatic subjects and to compare this to carotid plaque assessment by ultrasound, coronary plaques by coronary CTA, and inflammatory biomarkers in plasma.
Methods
Middle-aged asymptomatic men, n = 43, without known cardiovascular disease and diabetes were included. Plaques in coronary and carotid arteries were evaluated using CTA. Total plaque volumes and plaque composition were assessed by a validated plaque analysis software. The 60% centile cut point was used to divide the population into low or high carotid total plaque volumes. The occurrence of carotid plaques and intima-media thickness (IMT) was estimated by ultrasound.
Results
Carotid plaque by ultrasound was undiagnosed in 13 of 28 participants (46%) compared to CTA. Participants having carotid plaques by ultrasound had significantly higher absolute volumes of all CTA-defined carotid plaque subtypes and a higher fraction of calcified plaque. A high carotid total plaque volume was independently associated with age (adjusted odds ratio (OR) 1.41 [95% confidence interval (CI) 1.14–1.74], p = 0.001), IMT (adjusted OR 2.26 [95% CI 1.10–4.65], p = 0.03), and D-dimer (adjusted OR 8.86 [95% CI 1.26–62.37], p = 0.03). All coronary plaque features were significantly higher in participants with a high carotid total plaque volume.
Conclusion
The occurrence of carotid plaques in asymptomatic individuals is underestimated by ultrasound compared to plaque assessment by CTA. Carotid plaque composition by CTA is different in individuals with and without carotid plaques by ultrasound.
Key Points
• The occurrence of carotid plaques by ultrasound was underestimated in 46% of participants who had plaques by carotid CTA.
• Participants with carotid plaques by ultrasound had higher volumes of all plaque subtypes and a higher calcified plaque component as determined by carotid CTA compared to participants without carotid plaques by ultrasound.
• A high carotid total plaque volume was independently associated with age, intima-media thickness, and D-dimer.
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The International Society of Arthroscopy, Knee Surgery and Orthopaedic Sports Medicine classification of knee meniscus tears: three-dimensional MRI and arthroscopy correlationAbstractObjectives
To introduce MRI-based International Society of Arthroscopy, Knee Surgery and Orthopaedic Sports Medicine (ISAKOS) classification system of meniscal tears and correlate it to the surgical findings from arthroscopy. We hypothesized that the ISAKOS classification will provide good inter-modality and inter-rater reliability for use in the routine clinical practice of radiologists and orthopedic surgeons.
Methods
In this HIPAA-compliant cross-sectional study, there were 44 meniscus tears in 39 patients (26 males, 16 females). Consecutive arthroscopy-proven meniscal tears (March 2017 to December 2017) were evaluated by two board-certified musculoskeletal radiologists using isotropic three-dimensional (3D) MRI user-defined reconstructions. The surgically validated ISAKOS classification of meniscal tears was used to describe medial meniscus (MM) and lateral meniscus (LM) tears. Prevalence-adjusted bias-adjusted kappa (PABAK) and conventional kappa, and paired t test and intra-class correlation coefficient (ICC) were calculated for categorical and numerical variables, respectively.
Results
For the MM, the PABAK for location, depth, length (ICC), pattern, quality of meniscus tissue, and zone was 0.7–1, 0.65, 0.57, 0.67, 0.78, and 0.39–0.7, respectively. For the LM, the PABAK for location, depth, length (ICC), pattern, quality of meniscus tissue, zone, and central to popliteus hiatus was 0.57–0.95, 0.57, 0.74, 0.93, 0.38, 0.52–0.67, and 0.48, respectively. The mean tear lengths were larger on MRI than on arthroscopy (mean difference MM 9.74 mm (6.66 mm, 12.81 mm; p < 0.001), mean difference LM 4.04 mm (0.31 mm, 7.76 mm; p = 0.034)).
Conclusions
The ISAKOS classification of meniscal tears on 3D MRI provides mostly moderate agreement, which was similar to the agreement at arthroscopy.
Key Points
• There is a fair to good inter-method correlation in most categories of ISAKOS meniscus tear classification.
• The tear lengths are significantly larger on MRI than on arthroscopy.
• The inter-reader correlation on 3D MRI is moderate to excellent, with the exception of lateral meniscus tear patterns.
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Creating high-quality radiology reports in foreign languages through multilingual structured reportingAbstractObjectives
Globalization and migration are increasing the demand for reports in different languages. We aimed to examine if structured reports created by non-German-speaking radiologists with multilingual templates show significant differences in quality to structured reports and free-text reports by German native speakers.
Methods
We used structured templates that allow radiologists to report in their mother tongue and then switch the report language to German or English automatically using proprietary software. German- and English-speaking radiology residents created structured reports in both German and English with these templates. Reports for three different exam types were created (intensive care chest x-ray, shoulder x-ray specifically for degenerative processes, and CT pulmonary angiogram for pulmonary embolism). The report quality of automatically translated German structured reports by English-speaking radiologists and German structured reports by German radiologists was then evaluated by German clinicians with a standardized questionnaire. The questionnaire was designed to assess attributes including content, comprehensibility, clinical consequences, and overall quality.
Results
Structured reports by English-speaking radiologists that were automatically translated into German and German structured reports by German radiologists both received very high or high overall quality ratings in the majority of cases, showing no significant differences in quality. Likewise, no significant differences were observed between the two report types regarding comprehensibility and clinical consequences. Structured reports by German radiologists received significantly better ratings for overall quality and comprehensibility compared to free-text reports by German radiologists.
Conclusions
Multilingual structured reporting templates may serve as a feasible tool for creating high-quality radiology reports in foreign languages.
Key Points
• Multilingualism in structured reporting templates can be a useful tool for creating high-quality radiology reports in foreign languages.
• German reports created with multilingual structured reporting templates by English-speaking radiologists and German structured reports by German radiologists exhibit no significant differences in overall report quality.
• Multilingual structured reporting templates can help radiologists overcome communication barriers and facilitate teleradiology.
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Tumor location does not impact oncologic outcomes for percutaneous microwave ablation of clinical T1a renal cell carcinomaAbstractObjective
To evaluate the impact of anterior tumor location on oncologic efficacy, complication rates, and procedure duration for 151 consecutive biopsy-proven clinical T1a renal cell carcinoma (RCC) treated with percutaneous microwave (MW) ablation.
Methods
This single-center retrospective study was performed under a waiver of informed consent. One hundred forty-eight consecutive patients (103 M/45 F; median age 67 years, IQR 61–73) with 151 cT1a biopsy-proven RCC (median diameter 2.4 cm, IQR 1.9–3.0) were treated with percutaneous MW ablation between March 2011 and August 2017. Patient and procedural data collected included Charlson comorbidity index (CCI), RENAL nephrometry score (NS), use of hydrodisplacement, MW antennas/generator output/time, and procedure time (PT). Data were stratified by anterior, posterior, and midline tumor location and compared with the Kruskal–Wallis or chi-squared tests. The Kaplan–Meier method was used for survival analyses.
Results
Tumor size, NS, and use/volume of hydrodisplacement were similar for posterior and anterior tumors (p > 0.05). Patients with anterior tumors had a higher CCI (3 vs 4, p = 0.001). Median PT for posterior and anterior tumors was similar (100 vs 108 min, p = 0.26). Single session technical success and primary efficacy were achieved for all 151 tumors including 61 posterior and 67 anterior tumors. The 4 (3%) Clavien III–IV complications and 6 (4%) local recurrences were not associated with tumor location (p > 0.05). Three-year RFS, CSS, and OS were 95% (95% CI 0.87, 0.98), 100% (95% CI 1.0, 1.0), and 96% (95% CI 0.89, 0.98), respectively.
Conclusions
The safety and efficacy of percutaneous microwave ablation for anterior and posterior RCC are similar.
Key Points
• The safety profile for percutaneous microwave ablation of anterior and posterior T1a renal cell carcinoma is equivalent.
• Percutaneous microwave ablation of T1a renal cell carcinoma provides durable oncologic control regardless of tumor location.
• Placement of additional microwave antennas and use of hydrodisplacement are associated with longer procedure times.
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Is liver lesion characterisation by simplified IVIM DWI also feasible at 3.0 T?AbstractObjective
To evaluate simplified intravoxel incoherent motion (IVIM) diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) for liver lesion characterisation at 3.0 T and to compare it with 1.5 T.
Methods
3.0-T DWI data from a respiratory-gated MRI sequence with b = 0, 50, 250, and 800 s/mm2 were analysed in 116 lesions (78 patients) and 27 healthy livers. Apparent diffusion coefficient ADC = ADC(0,800) and IVIM-based parameters D1′ = ADC(50,800), D2′ = ADC(250,800), f1′ = f(0,50,800), f2′ = f(0,250,800), D*′ = D*(0,50,250,800), ADClow = ADC(0,50), and ADCdiff = ADClow-D2′ were calculated voxel-wise and analysed on per-patient basis. Results were compared with those of 173 lesions (110 patients) and 40 healthy livers at 1.5 T.
Results
Focal nodular hyperplasias were best discriminated from all other lesions by f1′ and haemangiomas by D1′ with an area under the curve (AUC) of 0.993 and 1.000, respectively. For discrimination between malignant and benign lesions, ADC was best suited (AUC of 0.968). The combination of D1′ and f1′ correctly identified more lesions as malignant or benign than the ADC (99.1% vs 88.8%). Discriminatory power for differentiating malignant from benign lesions tended to be higher at 3.0 T than at 1.5 T.
Conclusion
Simplified IVIM is suitable for lesion characterisation at 3.0 T with a trend of superior diagnostic accuracy for discriminating malignant from benign lesions compared with 1.5 T.
Key Points
• Simplified IVIM is also suitable for liver lesion characterisation at 3.0 T.
• Excellent accuracy was reached for discriminating malignant from benign lesions.
• The acquisition of only three b-values (0, 50, 800 s/mm 2 ) is required.
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Tumour necrosis as assessed with 18 F-FDG PET is a potential prognostic marker in diffuse large B cell lymphoma independent of MYC rearrangementsAbstractObjectives
MYC gene rearrangements in diffuse large B cell lymphomas (DLBCLs) result in high proliferation rates and are associated with a poor prognosis. Strong proliferation is associated with high metabolic demand and tumour necrosis. The aim of this study was to investigate differences in the presence of necrosis and semiquantitative 18F-FDG PET metrics between DLBCL cases with or without a MYC rearrangement. The prognostic impact of necrosis and semiquantitative 18F-FDG PET parameters was investigated in an explorative survival analysis.
Methods
Fluorescence in situ hybridisation analysis for MYC rearrangements, visual assesment, semiquantitative analysis of 18F-FDG PET scans and patient survival analysis were performed in 61 DLBCL patients, treated at a single referral hospital between 2008 and 2015.
Results
Of 61 tumours, 21 (34%) had a MYC rearrangement (MYC+). MYC status was neither associated with the presence of necrosis on 18F-FDG PET scans (necrosisPET; p = 1.0) nor associated with the investigated semiquantitative parameters maximum standard uptake value (SUVmax; p = 0.43), single highest SUVmax (p = 0.49), metabolic active tumour volume (MATV; p = 0.68) or total lesion glycolysis (TLG; p = 0.62). A multivariate patient survival analysis of the entire cohort showed necrosisPET as an independent prognostic marker for disease-specific survival (DSS) (HR = 13.9; 95% CI 3.0–65; p = 0.001).
Conclusions
MYC rearrangements in DLBCL have no influence on the visual parameter necrosisPET or the semi-quantiative parameters SUVmax, MATV and TLG. Irrespective of MYC rearrangements, necrosisPET is an independent, adverse prognostic factor for DSS.
Key Points
• Retrospective analysis indicates that MYC rearrangement is not associated with necrosis on 18 F-FDG PET (necrosis PET ) scans or semiquantitative 18 F-FDG PET parameters.
• Necrosis PET is a potential independent adverse prognostic factor for disease-specific survival in patients with DLBCL and is not influenced by the presence of MYC rearrangements.
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Medicine by Alexandros G. Sfakianakis,Anapafseos 5 Agios Nikolaos 72100 Crete Greece,00302841026182,00306932607174,alsfakia@gmail.com,
Ετικέτες
Κυριακή 20 Οκτωβρίου 2019
Αναρτήθηκε από
Medicine by Alexandros G. Sfakianakis,Anapafseos 5 Agios Nikolaos 72100 Crete Greece,00302841026182,00306932607174,alsfakia@gmail.com,
στις
10:50 μ.μ.
Ετικέτες
00302841026182,
00306932607174,
alsfakia@gmail.com,
Anapafseos 5 Agios Nikolaos 72100 Crete Greece,
Medicine by Alexandros G. Sfakianakis,
Telephone consultation 11855 int 1193
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