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Published in: European Radiology 11/2020

01-11-2020 | Ultrasound | Hepatobiliary-Pancreas

Gadoxetate-enhanced abbreviated MRI is highly accurate for hepatocellular carcinoma screening

Authors: Naik Vietti Violi, Sara Lewis, Joseph Liao, Miriam Hulkower, Gabriela Hernandez-Meza, Katherine Smith, James S. Babb, Xing Chin, Joseph Song, Daniela Said, Shingo Kihira, Claude B. Sirlin, Scott B. Reeder, Mustafa R. Bashir, Kathryn J. Fowler, Bart S. Ferket, Keith Sigel, Bachir Taouli

Published in: European Radiology | Issue 11/2020

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Abstract

Objectives

The primary objective was to compare the performance of 3 different abbreviated MRI (AMRI) sets extracted from a complete gadoxetate-enhanced MRI obtained for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) screening. Secondary objective was to perform a preliminary cost-effectiveness analysis, comparing each AMRI set to published ultrasound performance for HCC screening in the USA.

Methods

This retrospective study included 237 consecutive patients (M/F, 146/91; mean age, 58 years) with chronic liver disease who underwent a complete gadoxetate-enhanced MRI for HCC screening in 2017 in a single institution. Two radiologists independently reviewed 3 AMRI sets extracted from the complete exam: non-contrast (NC-AMRI: T2-weighted imaging (T2wi)+diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI)), dynamic-AMRI (Dyn-AMRI: T2wi+DWI+dynamic T1wi), and hepatobiliary phase AMRI (HBP-AMRI: T2wi+DWI+T1wi during the HBP). Each patient was classified as HCC-positive/HCC-negative based on the reference standard, which consisted in all available patient data. Diagnostic performance for HCC detection was compared between sets. Estimated set characteristics, including historical ultrasound data, were incorporated into a microsimulation model for cost-effectiveness analysis.

Results

The reference standard identified 13/237 patients with HCC (prevalence, 5.5%; mean size, 33.7 ± 30 mm). Pooled sensitivities were 61.5% for NC-AMRI (95% confidence intervals, 34.4–83%), 84.6% for Dyn-AMRI (60.8–95.1%), and 80.8% for HBP-AMRI (53.6–93.9%), without difference between sets (p range, 0.06–0.16). Pooled specificities were 95.5% (92.4–97.4%), 99.8% (98.4–100%), and 94.9% (91.6–96.9%), respectively, with a significant difference between Dyn-AMRI and the other sets (p < 0.01). All AMRI methods were effective compared with ultrasound, with life-year gain of 3–12 months against incremental costs of US$ < 12,000.

Conclusions

NC-AMRI has limited sensitivity for HCC detection, while HBP-AMRI and Dyn-AMRI showed excellent sensitivity and specificity, the latter being slightly higher for Dyn-AMRI. Cost-effectiveness estimates showed that AMRI is effective compared with ultrasound.

Key Points

• Comparison of different abbreviated MRI (AMRI) sets reconstructed from a complete gadoxetate MRI demonstrated that non-contrast AMRI has low sensitivity (61.5%) compared with contrast-enhanced AMRI (80.8% for hepatobiliary phase AMRI and 84.6% for dynamic AMRI), with all sets having high specificity.
• Non-contrast and hepatobiliary phase AMRI can be performed in less than 14 min (including set-up time), while dynamic AMRI can be performed in less than 17 min.
• All AMRI sets were cost-effective for HCC screening in at-risk population in comparison with ultrasound.
Appendix
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Metadata
Title
Gadoxetate-enhanced abbreviated MRI is highly accurate for hepatocellular carcinoma screening
Authors
Naik Vietti Violi
Sara Lewis
Joseph Liao
Miriam Hulkower
Gabriela Hernandez-Meza
Katherine Smith
James S. Babb
Xing Chin
Joseph Song
Daniela Said
Shingo Kihira
Claude B. Sirlin
Scott B. Reeder
Mustafa R. Bashir
Kathryn J. Fowler
Bart S. Ferket
Keith Sigel
Bachir Taouli
Publication date
01-11-2020
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
European Radiology / Issue 11/2020
Print ISSN: 0938-7994
Electronic ISSN: 1432-1084
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00330-020-07014-1

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