Abstract

The diagnostic performance for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is hampered using gadoxetic acid-enhanced magnetic resonance (MR) imaging due to the high incidence of transient severe motion in arterial phase (AP). Dynamic contrast enhanced computed tomography (CT) imaging yield high detection rate for hepatic nodules in AP, and the combined use of CT arterial phase (CTAP) imaging with gadoxetic acid-enhanced MR imaging may improve the diagnostic performance for HCC. Thus, this study aimed to determine whether the combined use of CTAP and gadoxetic acid-enhanced MR imaging can improve the diagnostic performance for HCC based on various imaging diagnostic criteria. A total of 169 surgically histologically confirmed hepatic nodules (137 HCCs and 32 non-HCC-nodules) were retrospectively enrolled. Two different imaging protocol sets were reviewed: (I) full gadoxetic acid-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) sequences; and (II) CTAP imaging combined with the gadoxetic acid-enhanced MRI but excluding the MR imaging AP images. Three independent reviewers followed the 2018 Liver Reporting and Data System (LI-RADS), European Association for the Study of the Liver (EASL), and 2018 Korean guidelines to characterize these heaptic nodules by reviewing the two imaging protocol sets and the diagnostic peformance were compared by using McNemar test. The detection rate of AP hyperenhancement (APHE) was higher in CTAP than in the MR arterial phase (MRAP) for hepatic nodules (87.57% vs. 75.15%) and HCCs (97.08% vs. 82.48%) (all P<0.001). For the LI-RADS criteria, the Protocol-II increased the sensitivity to 75.91% from 70.80% of Protocol-I (P=0.016), with a minimal decrease of the specificity to 71.88% from 75.00% (P=1.000). For the EASL criteria, the numerical increases were found of Protocol-II than Protocol-I in both sensitivity (81.02% vs. 78.10%) and specificity (75.00% vs.71.88%), but with no statistical significance. For the Korean criteria, the Protocol-II increased the sensitivity to 94.89% from 83.21% of Protocol-I (P<0.001). The specificity increased to 65.63% from 62.50%, with no statistical significance (P=1.000). Using CTAP instead of gadoxetic acid-enhanced MRAP can improve the diagnostic sensitivity for HCC and also yields a comparable specificity. Thus, the combined use of CTAP and gadoxetic acid-enhanced MR imaging may improve the diagnostic performance for HCC.

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