1. Rectal Tumor Stiffness Quantified by In Vivo Tomoelastography and Collagen Content Estimated by Histopathology Predict Tumor Aggressiveness
- Author
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Jiaxi Hu, Jing Guo, Yigang Pei, Ping Hu, Mengsi Li, Ingolf Sack, and Wenzheng Li
- Subjects
tomoelastography ,rectal cancer ,collagen content ,tumor aggressiveness ,multifrequency magnetic resonance elastography ,stiffness ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
PurposeTo investigate the significance of collagen in predicting the aggressiveness of rectal tumors in patients, examined in vivo based on tomoelastography quantified stiffness and ex vivo by histologically measured collagen volume fraction (CVF).Experimental Design170 patients with suspected rectal cancer were prospectively enrolled and underwent preoperative magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and rectal tomoelastography, a technique based on multifrequency magnetic resonance elastography. Histopathologic analysis identified eighty patients with rectal cancer who were divided into subgroups by tumor-node (TN) stage, prognostic stage, and risk level. Rectal tumor stiffness was correlated with histopathologic CVF. Area-under-the-curve (AUC) and contingency analysis were used to evaluate the performance of rectal stiffness in distinguishing tumor stages which was compared to standard clinical MRIResultsIn vivo tomoelastography revealed that rectal tumor stiffened significantly with increased TN stage (p
- Published
- 2021
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