Purpose: The purpose of this study was to compare the detection rate of arterial phase hyperenhancement (APHE) in small hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) between single arterial phase (single-AP) and triple hepatic arterial (triple-AP) phase MRI and between extracellular (ECA) and hepato-specific (HBA) contrast agents.
Materials and methods: A total of 109 cirrhotic patients with 136 HCCs from seven centers were included. There were 93 men and 16 women, with a mean age of 64.0 ± 8.9 (standard deviation) years (range: 42-82 years). Each patient underwent both ECA-MRI and HBA (gadoxetic acid)-MRI examination within one month of each other. Each MRI examination was retrospectively reviewed by two readers blinded to the second MRI examination. The sensitivities of triple- and single-AP for the detection of APHE were compared, and each phase of the triple-AP sequence was compared with the other two.
Results: No differences in APHE detection were found between single-AP (97.2%; 69/71) and triple-AP (98.5%; 64/65) (P > 0.99) at ECA-MRI. No differences in APHE detection were found between single-AP (93%; 66/71) and triple-AP (100%; 65/65) at HBA-MRI (P = 0.12). Patient age, size of the nodules, use of automatic triggering, type of contrast agent, and type of sequence were not significantly associated with APHE detection. The reader was the single variable significantly associated with APHE detection. For triple-AP, best APHE detection rate was found for early and middle-AP images compared to late-AP images (P = 0.001 and P = 0.003). All APHEs were detected with the combination of early-AP and middle-AP images, except one that was detected on late-AP images by one reader.
Conclusion: Our study suggests that both single- and triple-AP can be used in liver MRI for the detection of small HCC especially when using ECA. Early AP and middle-AP are the most efficient phases and should be preferred for detecting APHE, regardless of the contrast agent used.
Keywords: Carcinoma; Cirrhosis; Contrast media; Hepatocellular carcinoma; Magnetic resonance imaging.
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