Abstract

To assess the diagnostic accuracy of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for detecting myometrial invasion, cervical invasion, and lymph node metastases in endometrial cancer. A systematic literature search was performed in PubMed, Embase, Cochrane Library, Web of Science, and Clinical trials. The methodological quality of each study was assessed by using the standard Quality Assessment of Diagnostic Accuracy Studies-2. Statistical analysis included evaluating publication bias, assessing threshold effect, exploring heterogeneity, pooling data, meta-regression, forest plot, and summary receiver-operating characteristics curves construction. Fourteen studies could be analyzed. For detecting deep myometrial invasion, the pooled sensitivity and specificity were 0.79 and 0.81 respectively, and patients younger than 60 years old demonstrated higher sensitivity (0.84) and specificity (0.90). The diagnostic accuracy is highest by jointly using T2-weighted image, dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI, and diffusion weighted imaging to detect the deep myometrial invasion. There were low sensitivity and high specificity for the diagnosis of cervical invasion (0.53, 0.95), cervical stromal invasion (0.50, 0.95), pelvic or/and para-aortic lymph node metastases (0.59, 0.95), and pelvic lymph node metastases (0.65, 0.95). MRI has good diagnostic performance for assessing myometrial invasion in patients with endometrial cancer, especially in patients younger than 60 years old. Dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI and diffusion weighted imaging can help improve sensitivity and specificity for detecting myometrial invasion. MRI shows high specificity for detecting cervical invasion and lymph node metastases in endometrial cancer.

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