Publication: Differentiation of malignant and benign adrenal lesions with delayed CT: multivariate analysis and predictive models
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KU-Authors
KU Authors
Co-Authors
Ng, Chaan S.
Wei, Wei
Li, Xiao
Ghosh, Payel
Perrier, Nancy A.
Grubbs, Elizabeth
Prieto, Victor G.
Lee, Jeffrey E.
Hobbs, Brian P.
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Abstract
Objective: The purpose of this study is to identify imaging and patient parameters that affect the diagnostic performance of delayed contrast-enhanced CT for distinguishing malignant from benign adrenal lesions larger than 1 cm in adult patients and to derive predictive models. Materials and Methods: This retrospective study assessed 97 pathologically proven adrenal lesions that had undergone unenhanced, portal venous, and 15-minute delayed CT. Quantitatively, single-parameter evaluations of lesion attenuation (in Hounsfield units) and absolute percentage enhancement washout (APEW) and relative percentage enhancement washout (RPEW) were performed. In addition, descriptive CT features (lesion size, margin definition, heterogeneity vs homogeneity, fat, and calcification) and patients' demographic characteristics and medical history of malignancy were evaluated for association with lesion status using multiple logistic regression with stepwise model selection. Areas under the ROC curve (A(z)) were determined for univariate and multivariate analyses. Leave-one-lesion-out cross-validation was applied to ascertain the predictive performance of single-parameter and multivariate evaluations. Results: The A(z) values for unenhanced attenuation, portal venous attenuation, delayed attenuation, APEW, and RPEW were 0.835, 0.534, 0.847, 0.792, and 0.871, respectively. Multivariate analyses revealed that portal venous attenuation, delayed attenuation, and APEW were significant features, with an A(z) of 0.923 when combined. The addition of the descriptive CT features increased the A(z) to 0.938; patient age and a history of malignancy were additional significant factors, increasing the A(z) to 0.956 and 0.972, respectively. The combined predictive classifier yielded 89% accuracy under cross-validation, compared with the best commonly applied single-parameter evaluation (77% for RPEW < 40%). Conclusions: Multivariate imaging evaluation applied to delayed contrast-enhanced CT alone, with or without patient characteristics, improves diagnostic performance for characterizing adrenal lesions beyond those of single-parameter evaluations. Predictive formulas assessing the probabilities of lesion benignity or malignancy are provided.
Source
Publisher
Amer Roentgen Ray Soc
Subject
Radiology, Nuclear medicine, Medical imaging
Citation
Has Part
Source
American Journal of Roentgenology
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Edition
DOI
10.2214/AJR.17.18428