• Eur J Radiol · May 2007

    Comparative Study

    The value of contrast enhanced ultrasonography in detection of liver metastases from colorectal cancer: a prospective double-blinded study.

    • Lars Peter Skovgaard Larsen, Mona Rosenkilde, Henrik Christensen, Niels Bang, Lars Bolvig, Thomas Christiansen, and Søren Laurberg.
    • Department of Radiology, Aarhus University Hospital, Tage Hansensgade 2, 8000 C, Aarhus, Denmark. ovl02ll@as.aaa.dk
    • Eur J Radiol. 2007 May 1;62(2):302-7.

    ObjectiveTo compare sensitivity and specificity of contrast enhanced ultrasonography (CEUS) with conventional ultrasonography (US) in detection of liver metastases in patients with colorectal adenocarcinoma (CRC) in a patient-by-patient analysis.Materials And MethodsA prospective study of 461 consecutive patients referred to the Department of Colorectal Surgery, Aarhus University Hospital with primary or local recurrence of CRC. In order to detect possible liver metastases all patients underwent liver US, followed by CEUS by another investigator. Multislice CT scanning (MDCT), and intraoperative ultrasonography (IOUS) were then performed. Fine-needle biopsy was performed on all suspicious lesions. Each examination was interpreted blindly and the combination of biphasic MDCT, IOUS, follow up and biopsy was the gold standard.ResultsStandard of reference found liver metastases in 54 patients (14.8%). Contrast enhanced ultrasonography improved the sensitivity significantly in detection of liver metastases from 0.69 by US to 0.80 (p=0.031). In 24 patients, CEUS found a higher number of metastases than US (p<0.001). The specificity (0.98) and the positive predictive value (0.86) was the same.ConclusionContrast enhanced ultrasonography improves sensitivity in detection of liver metastases in patients with CRC and in nearly half of the cases CEUS found a higher number of metastases than US.

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