1. Detection of Malignant Primary Hepatic Neoplasms with Gadobenate Dimeglumine (Gd-BOPTA) Enhanced T1-Weighted Hepatocyte Phase MR Imaging: Results of Off-site Blinded Review in a Phase-II Multicenter Trial
- Author
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Andrea Giovagnoni, Alessandro Carriero, Bernd Hamm, Giovanni Morana, Didier Mathieu, Richard L. Baron, M. W. Bourne, Constantino S. Peña, Andrea Villa, Miles A. Kirchin, Sanjay Saini, Gianpaolo Pirovano, Alberto Spinazzi, and R. Caudana
- Subjects
Adenoma ,Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Liver Cell/*diagnosis *Contrast Media Liver Neoplasms/*diagnosis Magnetic Resonance Imaging/*methods Meglumine/*analogs & derivatives/*diagnostic use ,Liver neoplasms, diagnosis ,Contrast Media ,Lesion Number ,Adenoma, Liver Cell ,Lesion ,McNemar's test ,Text mining ,Meglumine ,Multicenter trial ,medicine ,Magnetic resonance (MR), contrast media ,Organometallic Compounds ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Aged ,business.industry ,Liver neoplasms, MR ,Liver Neoplasms ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Image Enhancement ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Hepatocyte ,Lipiodol ,Original Article ,Female ,Radiology ,medicine.symptom ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Objective: To investigate the efficacy of gadobenate dimeglumine (GdBOPTA) enhanced MR imaging for the detection of liver lesions in patients with primary malignant hepatic neoplasms. Materials and Methods: Thirty-one patients with histologically proven primary malignancy of the liver were evaluated before and after administration of GdBOPTA at dose 0.05 or 0.10 mmol/kg. T1-weighted spin echo (T1W-SE) and gradient echo (T1W-GRE) images were evaluated for lesion number, location, size and confidence by three off-site independent reviewers and the findings were compared to reference standard imaging (intraoperative ultrasound, computed tomography during arterial portography or lipiodol computed tomography). Results were analyzed for significance using a two-sided McNemar’s test. Results: More lesions were identified on Gd-BOPTA enhanced images than on unenhanced images and there was no significant difference in lesion detection between either concentration. The largest benefit was in detection of lesions under 1 cm in size (7 to 21, 9 to 15, 16 to 18 for reviewers A, B, C respectively). In 68% of the patients with more than one lesion, Gd-BOPTA increased the number of lesions detected. Conclusion: Liver MR imaging after Gd-BOPTA increases the detection of liver lesions in patients with primary malignant hepatic neoplasm.
- Published
- 2001