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MRI Contrast Agent Improves Detection of Lymph Nodes Metastases

By MedImaging International staff writers
Posted on 24 Feb 2010
Adding the contrast agent gadolinium during magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for primary tumor assessment was shown to improve accuracy for detecting lymph node metastases, according to a new review.

Gadolinium-enhanced MRI is primarily used to visualize primary tumors, highlight tumor vascularity, and increasingly to detect and evaluate lymph node metastases. More...
In this systematic review, the investigators recommend that contrast highlighting be included as a malignancy criterion when this agent is used for primary tumor visualization.

Wenche M. Klerkx, M.D., Ph.D., from the department of gynecology and obstetrics at the University Medical Center Utrecht (The Netherlands), and colleagues searched the literature for studies that compared the diagnostic accuracy of gadolinium-enhanced MRI for staging lymph node metastases with that of histopathologic examination. The researchers conducted a meta-analysis that encompassed more than 30 studies from the last 10 years and reported summary sensitivity and specificity of MRI for detecting nodal metastases. They published their findings online February 1, 2010, in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

The researchers found that overall accuracy of gadolinium-enhanced MRI for the detection of nodal metastases was moderate. They also concluded that incorporating contrast enhancement in the malignancy criteria improves the accuracy of this diagnostic test.

"We further advocate the use of uniform malignancy criteria, including contrast enhancement, for standardization of future evaluations,” the authors wrote in their article. "Gadolinium enhancement by itself does not have the diagnostic accuracy to replace histopathologic examination of lymph nodes; however, it can help identify suspicious lymph nodes that should be surgically collected for histopathologic examination.”

Study limitations included not all of the included studies reported diagnostic study quality, which precluded formal analyses based on the quality assessment items. A regression test for small-study effects was statistically significant, indicating that the retrieved studies had findings that may not be representative of the full range of evidence that has been produced (publication bias). In the overall analyses of the diagnostic accuracy of gadolinium-enhanced MRI for the detection of lymph node metastases, studies were pooled without regard to the primary tumor site.

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University Medical Centre Utrecht





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