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Published in: Abdominal Radiology 3/2021

01-03-2021 | Magnetic Resonance Imaging | Hollow Organ GI

Measurement of rectal tumor height from the anal verge on MRI: a comparison of internal versus external anal sphincter

Authors: David D. B. Bates, James L. Fuqua III, Junting Zheng, Marinela Capanu, Jennifer S. Golia Pernicka, Sidra Javed-Tayyab, Viktoriya Paroder, Iva Petkovska, Marc J. Gollub

Published in: Abdominal Radiology | Issue 3/2021

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Abstract

Purpose

To determine the most accurate measurement technique to assess rectal tumor height on MRI using two different anatomic landmarks for the anal verge.

Introduction

Accurate measurements and standardized reporting of MRI for rectal cancer staging is essential. It is not known whether measurements starting from the internal anal sphincter (IAS) or external anal sphincter (EAS) more closely correlate with tumor height from the anal verge on endoscopy.

Methods

This retrospective study included baseline staging MRI examinations for 85 patients after exclusions. Two radiologists blinded to endoscopic results measured the distance of rectal tumors from the internal anal sphincter and external anal sphincter on sagittal T2 images. The reference standard was endoscopic measurement of tumor height; descriptive statistics were performed.

Results

For reader 1, the mean difference in measurement of tumor height between MRI and endoscopy was − 0.45 cm (SD ± 1.76 cm, range − 6.0 to 3.9 cm) for the IAS and 0.51 cm (SD ± 1.75 cm range − 4.7 to 4.8 cm) for the EAS. For reader 2, the mean difference in measurement of tumor height between MRI and endoscopy was − 0.57 (STD ± 1.81, range − 5.9 to 4.8 cm) for the IAS and 0.52 cm (STD ± 1.85, range − 4.3 to 5.6 cm) for the EAS. Interobserver ICC was excellent between reader 1 and reader 2 for measurements from both the IAS (0.955 95% CI 0.931–0.97) and EAS (0.952, 95% CI 0.928, 0.969).

Conclusion

Measurement of tumor height on MRI was highly reproducible between readers; beginning measurements from the EAS tends to slightly overestimate tumor height on average and from the IAS tends to slightly underestimate tumor height on average.
Literature
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Metadata
Title
Measurement of rectal tumor height from the anal verge on MRI: a comparison of internal versus external anal sphincter
Authors
David D. B. Bates
James L. Fuqua III
Junting Zheng
Marinela Capanu
Jennifer S. Golia Pernicka
Sidra Javed-Tayyab
Viktoriya Paroder
Iva Petkovska
Marc J. Gollub
Publication date
01-03-2021
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Abdominal Radiology / Issue 3/2021
Print ISSN: 2366-004X
Electronic ISSN: 2366-0058
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00261-020-02757-3

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