Reuters Health Information: MRI with liver contrast edges ultrasound in spotting cancer
MRI with liver contrast edges ultrasound in spotting cancer
Last Updated: 2016-09-28
By David Douglas
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
with liver-specific contrast can lead to a higher detection rate
for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) than standard ultrasound
screening, according to Korean researchers.
"Our study demonstrated that, in patients with cirrhosis at
high-risk of developing liver cancer (hepatocellular carcinoma),
screening with liver-specific contrast-enhanced magnetic
resonance imaging markedly outperformed ultrasonography that is
the current recommendation by practice guidelines," Dr.
Young-Suk Lim of the University of Ulsan College of Medicine,
Seoul, told Reuters Health by email.
The research, a prospective surveillance study of 407
patients, was published online September 22 JAMA Oncology.
All patients had cirrhosis and an estimated annual risk of
HCC greater than 5.0%. They underwent up to three biannual
ultrasound and gadoxetic acid contrast-enhanced MRI screenings
between 2011 and 2014. All were followed-up with dynamic
computed tomography (CT) at six months after the study.
Overall, the patients received 1,100 paired screenings. HCC
was diagnosed and confirmed based on the results of histologic
examination and/or typical CT images in a total of 43 patients.
Five cases were missed by both methods, 11 were detected by
both methods, 26 were detected by MRI alone and one was detected
by ultrasound alone. This amounted to an 86.0% detection rate
for MRI, significantly greater than the 27.9% seen with
ultrasound.
MRI also had a significantly lower false-positive rate than
ultrasound (3.0% vs. 5.6%).
Thirty-two patients (74.4%) had very early stage HCC with a
single nodule of less than 2 cm. Of these, 29 received curative
treatments.
The three-year overall survival rate was 86.0% in patients
with HCC, "despite the severely limited access to liver
transplantation," the researchers note. In fact, they point out,
this was not significantly lower than the 94.2% overall survival
seen in the 364 patients without HCC.
Dr. Lim concluded, "MRI screening for a high-risk population
may help detecting liver cancers at a very early stage, and
consequently can allow a high chance of cure and favorable
survival of patients."
Dr. Jia-Horng Kao of the National Taiwan University College
of Medicine in Taipei, who wrote an accompanying editorial, told
Reuters Health by email, "Although the authors raised the novel
idea of MRI surveillance for HCC, whether we can recommend
gadoxetic acid-enhanced MRI for HCC surveillance is still an
open question, and it may only be considered in high-risk
patients."
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2dqREle and http://bit.ly/2cBX23Z
JAMA Oncol 2016.
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