Pixel to Pathology: A Prospective Cross-Sectional Study on the Role of Multidetector Computed Tomography in the Evaluation of Malignant Large Bowel Lesions With Histopathological Correlation

Cureus. 2024 Oct 10;16(10):e71200. doi: 10.7759/cureus.71200. eCollection 2024 Oct.

Abstract

Background and objectives: Colorectal lesions can present as a mass or as focal or diffuse thickening of the colon wall and may also be associated with abnormalities in the perienteric region. Multidetector computed tomography (MDCT) enables simultaneous imaging of both extracolonic structures and the gut wall. It is instrumental in assessing tumor extent, detecting pericolic dissemination, including lymph node involvement, and identifying metastases. This study aims to evaluate the role of MDCT in diagnosing large bowel lesions in patients referred from the surgery department with suspected large bowel pathology and to correlate MDCT findings with histopathological results.

Materials and methods: In the Department of Radiodiagnosis at Mahatma Gandhi Medical College and Research Institute (MGMCRI), Pondicherry, this study was carried out from February 2023 to January 2024 over a one-year span. CT imaging was carried out utilizing a GE Optima 128 Slice MDCT scanner for instances of clinically suspected large bowel pathology. IV contrast, rectal, oral (positive), and plain CT were the imaging protocols that were used.

Results: Thirty of the 45 patients were female, and 15 were male; most of the patients were in the 46-60 age range. Twenty-three of the 24 instances with a CT diagnosis of malignancy had a histological confirmation. On CT, all 21 benign lesions were correctly detected. Benign lesions showed homogenous attenuation, mild symmetric wall thickening, and diffuse bowel involvement. Heterogeneous attenuation, pronounced asymmetric wall thickening, and localized bowel involvement were observed in malignant lesions.

Conclusion: For the diagnosis and differentiation of benign from malignant colon and rectum lesions, MDCT has shown itself to be an excellent technique. MDCT provides additional information about related pericolic abnormalities, lymph node presence, neighboring organ infiltration, and distant metastases in addition to identifying the lesions.

Keywords: histopathological correlation; lymphadenopathy; mdct; pericolic fat stranding; wall thickening.