Publication

Contrast-enhanced ultrasound can guide the therapeutic strategy by improving the detection of colorectal liver metastases

Journal Paper/Review - Oct 13, 2020

Units
Keywords
CEUS detected 4% additional colorectal liver metastasis in tumor stage T3/T4.
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This resulted in a change of the oncological strategy in 75% of these patients.
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The number needed to screen to detect one additional CRLM by CEUS was 24.5.
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CEUS correctly classified lesions of uncertain dignity (21% in CT) in 98.4%.
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CEUS has an excellent diagnostic accuracy for these lesions (PPV: 100%; NPV: 99.6%).
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Citation
Sawatzki M, Guller U, Güsewell S, Husarik D, Semela D, Brand S. Contrast-enhanced ultrasound can guide the therapeutic strategy by improving the detection of colorectal liver metastases. Journal of hepatology 2020; online
Project
Type
Journal Paper/Review (English)
Journal
Journal of hepatology 2020; online
Publication Date
Oct 13, 2020
Publisher
Elsevier
Brief description/objective

Background and Aims
CT may miss up to 30% of cases of colorectal liver metastases (CRLM). We assessed the impact of contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) on the detection of CRLM and changes to the therapeutic strategy, and the accuracy of CEUS in differentiating unclear focal liver lesions (FLL) compared to staging-CT.
Methods
We prospectively analyzed all patients with newly diagnosed and histologically confirmed colorectal cancer (CRC) at our tertiary gastroenterological center between December 2015 and May 2019. CEUS was performed in a total of 296 patients without CRLM after staging-CT using the contrast agent (SonoVue®). Standard of reference was obtained by MRI or histology to diagnose CRLM missed by CT. Benign FLL were confirmed by MRI or follow-up CT (mean follow-up interval: 18 months).
Results
Eight additional CRLM were detected by CEUS (overall 2.7%; sensitivity 88.9%, specificity 99.0%, positive predictive value 100%, negative predictive value 99.6%). All patients with CRLM detected only by CEUS were in tumor stage T3/T4 (4.0% additionally detected CRLM). The number needed to screen to detect one additional CRLM by CEUS was 37 in all patients and 24.5 in T3/T4-patients. When results were reviewed by a board-certified radiologist and oncologist, the therapeutic strategy changed in 6 of these 8 patients. Among the 62 patients (20.9%) with unclear FLL after staging-CT, CEUS determined the dignity of 98.4% of the FLL.
Conclusion
CEUS detected overall 2.7% additional CRLM (including 4.0% in tumor stage T3/T4) with a significant impact on the oncological therapeutic strategy for 75% of these patients. Patients with tumor stage T3/T4 would particularly benefit from CEUS. We propose CEUS as the first imaging modality for CT-detected lesions of unknown dignity.