1. Comparison of 1.0 M Gadobutrol and 0.5 M Gadopentetate Dimeglumine-Enhanced Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Five Hundred Seventy-Two Patients With Known or Suspected Liver Lesions Results of a Multicenter, Double-Blind, Interindividual, Randomized Clinical Phase-III Trial
- Author
-
F. K. W. Schäfer, Marie-France Bellin, Gerhard Adam, Bernd Frericks, Andrea Laghi, Götz-Martin Richter, Gertrud Heinz-Peer, Thomas J. Vogl, Giuseppe Belfiore, Bernd Tombach, Bernard E. Van Beers, Frank W. Roemer, Alexander Wall, Renate Hammerstingl, Gianmarco Giuseppetti, Georg Bongartz, Peter Reimer, Valérie Vilgrain, Juan-Ramon Ayuso, Olivier J. Ernst, Christiane Pering, Christoph J. Zech, Dominik Weishaupt, and Julio Martín
- Subjects
Gadolinium DTPA ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Contrast Media ,Physical examination ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,law.invention ,Gadobutrol ,Precontrast ,Double-Blind Method ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Organometallic Compounds ,Prevalence ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Adverse effect ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Liver Neoplasms ,Reproducibility of Results ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Image Enhancement ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Confidence interval ,Europe ,Clinical trial ,Female ,Radiology ,contrast media ,diagnostic differentiation noninferiority ,double-blind method ,europe ,female ,gadobutrol ,gadolinium dtpa ,gadopentetate ,humans ,image enhancement ,liver lesions ,liver neoplasms ,magnetic resonance imaging ,male ,middle aged ,mri ,organometallic compounds ,prevalence ,reproducibility of results ,safety profiles ,sensitivity and specificity ,Nuclear medicine ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
OBJECTIVE:: To evaluate the diagnostic efficacy (accuracy, sensitivity, specificity) of 1.0 M gadobutrol versus 0.5 M gadopentetate for the classification of lesions as either benign or malignant in patients with known or suspected liver lesions. METHODS AND MATERIALS:: A multicenter, phase-III, randomized, interindividually controlled comparison study with blinded reader evaluation was performed to investigate the diagnostic efficacy of a bolus injection of 1.0 M gadobutrol compared with 0.5 M gadopentetate at a dose of 0.1 mmol Gd/kg BW.The imaging protocol included a dynamic 3D-evaluation, static conventional, and fat saturated T1-weighted sequences. MR datasets were evaluated by 3 independent radiologists. The standard of reference was defined by an independent truth panel (radiologist or hepatologist).The safety evaluation included adverse events, vital signs, and physical examination. RESULTS:: A total of 497 of 572 patients were eligible for the final efficacy analysis. Noninferiority of gadobutrol-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for the classification of liver lesions was demonstrated on the basis of diagnostic accuracy determined by the on-site investigators (-0.098, 0.021) as well as for the average reader of the blinded evaluation (-0.096, 0.014) (95% confidence interval), compared with the predefined standard of reference. Very similar increases in sensitivity (ranging from approximately 10% to approximately 55%) and specificity (ranging from approximately 1%- approximately 18%) compared with precontrast MRI were also observed for the 2 contrast agent groups, with maximum differences of 4%.Very similar, low rates of adverse events were recorded for each of the 2 groups. No clinically relevant changes in vital signs or the results of the physical examination were observed in any patient. CONCLUSION:: This study documents evidence for the noninferiority of a single i.v. bolus injection of 1.0 M gadobutrol (0.1 mmol/kg body weight) to 0.5 M gadopentetate (0.1 mmol/kg body weight) in the diagnostic assessment of liver lesions with contrast-enhanced MRI. The known excellent safety profile of gadobutrol was confirmed in this clinical trial and is similar to that of gadopentetate.
- Published
- 2009