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Urothelial-phase thin-section MDCT of the bladder in patients with hematuria: added value of multiplanar reformatted images

Authors
Han, Byoung HeePark, Sung BinChang, In HoChi, Byung HoonPark, Hyun JeongLee, Eun Sun
Issue Date
May-2021
Publisher
SPRINGER
Keywords
Urinary bladder neoplasms; Cystoscopy; Multidetector computed tomography; Hematuria; Early detection of cancer
Citation
ABDOMINAL RADIOLOGY, v.46, no.5, pp 2025 - 2031
Pages
7
Journal Title
ABDOMINAL RADIOLOGY
Volume
46
Number
5
Start Page
2025
End Page
2031
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/cau/handle/2019.sw.cau/53774
DOI
10.1007/s00261-020-02819-6
ISSN
2366-004X
2366-0058
Abstract
Purpose To evaluate the diagnostic performance of MDCT with axial images and multiplanar reformatted (MPR) images from the urothelial phase of the bladder in patients with hematuria using cystoscopy as the reference standard. Materials and methods Our IRB for human investigation approved this study, and informed consent was waived. We included 192 patients (121 men, 71 women; age range 17-90 years; mean age +/- SD: 60 +/- 14 years) who underwent contrast-enhanced MDCT (scan delay: 70 s; section thickness: 2 mm) and conventional cystoscopy examination for painless gross hematuria or recurrent microscopic hematuria. Two radiologists in consensus interpreted the images for the presence or absence of bladder lesions. Using the kappa statistic, the patient-based agreement was determined between the CT and cystoscopic findings. We compared the diagnostic performance of axial images to those with coronal and sagittal reformations to detect bladder lesions. Results MDCT showed excellent agreement between cystoscopy-axial scans (kappa = 0.896) and axial with reformatted images (kappa = 0.948). The sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of MDCT were 94%, 96%, and 95% in the axial scans and 98%, 97%, and 97% in the axial with reformatted images, respectively. All statistical parameters of diagnostic performance were similar between the axial and the reformatted images (p > .05). Conclusion Axial MDCT imaging demonstrates high diagnostic performance in detecting bladder lesions, but additional reformatted images can improve diagnostic accuracy.
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의과대학 (의학부(임상-서울))
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