Diagnostic value of whole body diffusion-weighted MRI compared to computed tomography for pre-operative assessment of patients suspected for ovarian cancer.
Despite excellent per-lesion performance for peritoneal staging, the additional clinical value of diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (DWI/MRI) compared to computed tomography (CT) remains to be established in ovarian cancer. Our purpose was to evaluate whole body (WB)-DWI/MRI for diagnosis, staging and operability assessment of patients suspected for ovarian cancer compared to CT.
One hundred and sixty-one patients suspected for ovarian carcinoma underwent 3 T WB-DWI/MRI and contrast-enhanced CT. WB-DWI/MRI and CT were compared for confirmation of the malignant nature and primary origin of the ovarian mass, Fédération Internationale de Gynécologie et d'Obstétrique (FIGO) staging and prediction of incomplete resection using institutional operability criteria. Interobserver agreement between two readers was determined for WB-DWI/MRI and CT.
WB-DWI/MRI showed a significantly higher accuracy than CT (93 versus 82%, p = 0.001) to confirm the malignant nature of the ovarian mass and correctly identified 26 of 32 (81%) cancers of non-ovarian origin compared to 10/32 (31%) for CT (p < 0.001). WB-DWI/MRI assigned more ovarian carcinoma patients to the correct FIGO stage (82/94, 87%) compared with CT (33/94, 35%). For prediction of incomplete resection, WB-DWI/MRI showed significantly higher sensitivity (94 versus 66%), specificity (97.7 versus 77.3%) and accuracy (95.7 versus 71.3%) compared to CT (p < 0.001). Interobserver agreement was almost perfect (κ = 0.90) for WB-DWI/MRI and moderate (κ = 0.52) for CT for prediction of incomplete resection.
WB-DWI/MRI was superior to CT for primary tumour characterisation, staging and prediction of incomplete resection in patients suspected for ovarian cancer.
Michielsen K
,Dresen R
,Vanslembrouck R
,De Keyzer F
,Amant F
,Mussen E
,Leunen K
,Berteloot P
,Moerman P
,Vergote I
,Vandecaveye V
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Preoperative staging of ovarian cancer: comparison between ultrasound, CT and whole-body diffusion-weighted MRI (ISAAC study).
To compare the performance of transvaginal and transabdominal ultrasound with that of the first-line staging method (contrast-enhanced computed tomography (CT)) and a novel technique, whole-body magnetic resonance imaging with diffusion-weighted sequence (WB-DWI/MRI), in the assessment of peritoneal involvement (carcinomatosis), lymph-node staging and prediction of non-resectability in patients with suspected ovarian cancer.
Between March 2016 and October 2017, all consecutive patients with suspicion of ovarian cancer and surgery planned at a gynecological oncology center underwent preoperative staging and prediction of non-resectability with ultrasound, CT and WB-DWI/MRI. The evaluation followed a single, predefined protocol, assessing peritoneal spread at 19 sites and lymph-node metastasis at eight sites. The prediction of non-resectability was based on abdominal markers. Findings were compared to the reference standard (surgical findings and outcome and histopathological evaluation).
Sixty-seven patients with confirmed ovarian cancer were analyzed. Among them, 51 (76%) had advanced-stage and 16 (24%) had early-stage ovarian cancer. Diagnostic laparoscopy only was performed in 16% (11/67) of the cases and laparotomy in 84% (56/67), with no residual disease at the end of surgery in 68% (38/56), residual disease ≤ 1 cm in 16% (9/56) and residual disease > 1 cm in 16% (9/56). Ultrasound and WB-DWI/MRI performed better than did CT in the assessment of overall peritoneal carcinomatosis (area under the receiver-operating-characteristics curve (AUC), 0.87, 0.86 and 0.77, respectively). Ultrasound was not inferior to CT (P = 0.002). For assessment of retroperitoneal lymph-node staging (AUC, 0.72-0.76) and prediction of non-resectability in the abdomen (AUC, 0.74-0.80), all three methods performed similarly. In general, ultrasound had higher or identical specificity to WB-DWI/MRI and CT at each of the 19 peritoneal sites evaluated, but lower or equal sensitivity in the abdomen. Compared with WB-DWI/MRI and CT, transvaginal ultrasound had higher accuracy (94% vs 91% and 85%, respectively) and sensitivity (94% vs 91% and 89%, respectively) in the detection of carcinomatosis in the pelvis. Better accuracy and sensitivity of ultrasound (93% and 100%) than WB-DWI/MRI (83% and 75%) and CT (84% and 88%) in the evaluation of deep rectosigmoid wall infiltration, in particular, supports the potential role of ultrasound in planning rectosigmoid resection. In contrast, for the bowel serosal and mesenterial assessment, abdominal ultrasound had the lowest accuracy (70%, 78% and 79%, respectively) and sensitivity (42%, 65% and 65%, respectively).
This is the first prospective study to document that, in experienced hands, ultrasound may be an alternative to WB-DWI/MRI and CT in ovarian cancer staging, including peritoneal and lymph-node evaluation and prediction of non-resectability based on abdominal markers of non-resectability. © 2021 International Society of Ultrasound in Obstetrics and Gynecology.
Fischerova D
,Pinto P
,Burgetova A
,Masek M
,Slama J
,Kocian R
,Frühauf F
,Zikan M
,Dusek L
,Dundr P
,Cibula D
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