Abstract

The extent of serosal exposure varies depending on the cross-section of the stomach that is viewed, affected by the visceral peritoneum of the omentum. Although multidetector computed tomography (MDCT) is the most useful method to predict serosal exposure, the MDCT criteria for such exposure by cross-sectional location remain to be established. The MDCT of gastric cancer patients who underwent surgery, and for whom pathological reports were available, were reviewed by radiologists. The MDCT criteria for invasion depth were divided into five grades: (1) smooth margin; (2) undulating margin; (3) streaky margin within vessels; (4) nodular margin within perigastric vessels; and (5) streaky or nodular margin over the perigastric vessels. The five grades were compared in terms of pathological tumor depth by curvature and wall group. A total of 125 patients of stage≥T2 were enrolled. The five MDCT grades correlated with tumor depth (P<0.001). Exposed serosal lesions of grade 3 (P=0.031) and 5 (P=0.030) constituted significantly the largest proportion of wall and curvature cancers, respectively. The accuracy of MDCT in terms of T staging using the five grades was calculated by cross-sectional location. The highest accuracies were associated with curvature- and wall-located tumors (55.1 and 64.3%, respectively) when serosal exposure was graded 5 and 3, respectively. The highest overall accuracy for T staging was 59.2% when the various MDCT criteria were applied by reference to the cross-sectional location. The MDCT criteria for serosal exposure vary by the cross-sectional location of the gastric cancer.

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