Detection of flat colorectal polyps at screening CT colonography in comparison with conventional polypoid lesions

Although the screening of small, flat polyps is clinically important, the role of CT colonography (CTC) screening in their detection has not been thoroughly investigated. To evaluate the detection capability and usefulness of CTC in the screening of flat and polypoid lesions by comparing CTC with op...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Acta radiologica (1987) Vol. 53; no. 7; p. 714
Main Authors: Sakamoto, Takashi, Mitsuzaki, Katsuhiko, Utsunomiya, Daisuke, Matsuda, Katsuhiko, Yamamura, Sadahiro, Urata, Joji, Kawakami, Megumi, Yamashita, Yasuyuki
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: England 01-09-2012
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Summary:Although the screening of small, flat polyps is clinically important, the role of CT colonography (CTC) screening in their detection has not been thoroughly investigated. To evaluate the detection capability and usefulness of CTC in the screening of flat and polypoid lesions by comparing CTC with optic colonoscopy findings as the gold standard. We evaluated the CTC detection capability for flat colorectal polyps with a flat surface and a height not exceeding 3 mm (n = 42) by comparing to conventional polypoid lesions (n = 418) according to the polyp diameter. Four types of reconstruction images including multiplanar reconstruction, volume rendering, virtual gross pathology, and virtual endoscopic images were used for visual analysis. We compared the abilities of the four reconstructions for polyp visualization. Detection sensitivity for flat polyps was 31.3%, 44.4%, and 87.5% for lesions measuring 2-3 mm, 4-5 mm, and ≥6 mm, respectively; the corresponding sensitivity for polypoid lesions was 47.6%, 79.0%, and 91.7%. The overall sensitivity for flat lesions (47.6%) was significantly lower than polypoid lesions (64.1%). Virtual endoscopic imaging showed best visualization among the four reconstructions. Colon cancers were detected in eight patients by optic colonoscopy, and CTC detected colon cancers in all eight patients. CTC using 64-row multidetector CT is useful for colon cancer screening to detect colorectal polyps while the detection of small, flat lesions is still challenging.
ISSN:1600-0455
DOI:10.1258/ar.2012.110685