Abstract

PurposeThe purpose of this study was to identify abdominal computed tomography (CT) features associated with underlying malignancy in patients with mesenteric panniculitis (MP). Materials and methodsThis single-institution retrospective longitudinal cohort study included patients with MP and a minimum 1-year abdominopelvic CT follow-up or 2-year clinical follow-up after initial abdominopelvic CT examination. Two radiologists, blinded to patients’ medical records, conjointly reviewed CT-based features of MP. Electronic medical records were reviewed for newly diagnosed malignancies with the following specific details: type (lymphoproliferative disease or solid malignancy), location (possible mesenteric drainage or distant), stage, time to diagnosis. An expert panel of three radiologists and one hemato-oncologist, who were blinded to the initial CT-based MP features, assessed the probability of association between MP and malignancy based on the malignancy characteristics. ResultsFrom 2006 to 2016, 444 patients with MP were included. There were 272 men and 172 women, with a median age of 64 years (age range: 25–89); the median overall follow-up was 36 months (IQR: 22, 60; range: 12–170). A total of 34 (8%) patients had a diagnosis of a new malignancy; 5 (1%) were considered possibly related to the MP, all being low-grade B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphomas. CT features associated with the presence of an underlying malignancy were the presence of an MP soft-tissue nodule with a short axis >10 mm (P < 0.0001) or lymphadenopathy in another abdominopelvic region (P < 0.0001). Associating these two features resulted in high diagnostic performance (sensitivity 100%; [95% CI: 57–100]; specificity 99% [95% CI: 98–100]). All related malignancies were identified. ConclusionFurther workup to rule out an underlying malignancy is only necessary in the presence of an MP soft-tissue nodule >10 mm or associated abdominopelvic lymphadenopathy.

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