Abstract

To compare the diagnostic performance of routine CT (rCT), CT enterography (CTE) and intraoperative quantification of PCI to surgical and pathological reference standards in patients with advanced ovarian cancer, a retrospective study of 122 patients who underwent cytoreduction surgery for ovarian peritoneal carcinomatosis was conducted. Radiological, surgical, and pathological PCIs were obtained from the corresponding reports, and the latter two were considered reference standards. The radiological techniques used were rCT: 64 MDCT (32 × 1 mm) (100 mL iopromide 370 i.v., 800 mL water p.o.), and CTE: 64 MDCT (64 × 0.5 mm) (130 mL iopromide 370 i.v., 1800 mL mannitol solution p.o., 20 mg buscopan i.v.). Data were grouped by imaging technique and analyzed using total PCI and stratified by tumor burden (low-PCI < 10, high-PCI > 20). Agreement, diagnostic performance and degree of cytoreduction were evaluated. Disappointing results for rCT and CTE were obtained when using a surgical referent, but better diagnostic performance and concordance (0.86 vs. 0.78 vs. 0.62, p < 0.05) was observed when using a pathological referent—surgical PCI overestimates and overstaged patients. PCI is underestimated by rCT rather than CTE. For high-PCI, the ROC curve was mediocre for CTE and useless for rCT, as it failed to identify any cases. For low-PCI, the ROC was excellent (86% CTE vs. 75% rCT). In four cases with low-PCI as determined by rCT, cytoreduction was suboptimal. CTE has a better diagnostic performance than rCT in quantifying PCI in patients with advanced ovarian cancer, suggesting that CTE should be used as the initial technique. Surgical-PCI could be considered as an imperfect standard reference.

Highlights

  • The absence of residual disease after cytoreductive surgery (CRS) is the most important prognostic factor in the management of patients with advanced ovarian cancer (AOC)

  • The purpose of this study is to analyze the diagnostic accuracy of routine CT, CT Enterography (CTE) for the detection of lesions at the regional level (R0 to R8 and R9 to R12) compared with surgical and pathological reference standards, and to compare the agreement and diagnostic performance of routine CT, CT enterography (CTE) and surgical in peritoneal cancer index (PCI) scoring with reference standards, in patients with tubo-ovarian peritoneal carcinomatosis

  • This prospective study enrolled 148 consecutive patients treated by cytoreductive surgery in our hospital, who were previously referred to the radiology service for staging or preoperative assessment of peritoneal carcinomatosis, between March 2011 and July 2017

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Summary

Introduction

The absence of residual disease after cytoreductive surgery (CRS) is the most important prognostic factor in the management of patients with advanced ovarian cancer (AOC). The peritoneal cancer index (PCI) is a measurement of the volume and extent of peritoneal disease based on a description of the location and size of tumor implants by anatomical region [1]. Routine CT (rCT) is the usual technique to assess the extension studies of abdominal neoplasms, its main limitation is the inability to assess mesenteric involvement and small peritoneal deposits in the intestinal serosa [4]. A previous study identified CT enteroclysis (enteral contrast is introduced via a nasojejunal tube placed fluoroscopically prior to CT examination) as a reliable preoperative mapping of the extent and distribution of PC in the small bowel and mesentery [5]. Enteroclysis requires the placement of a nasojejunal tube under fluoroscopic control, which increases radiation exposure and demands more ward and radiological time

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