4.6 Article

Computed Tomography Perfusion Measurements in Renal Lesions Obtained by Bayesian Estimation, Advanced Singular-Value Decomposition Deconvolution, Maximum Slope, and Patlak Models Intermodel Agreement and Diagnostic Accuracy of Tumor Classification

Journal

INVESTIGATIVE RADIOLOGY
Volume 53, Issue 8, Pages 477-485

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/RLI.0000000000000477

Keywords

Computed tomography; x-ray; perfusion imaging; models; theoretical; Bayesian method; kidney neoplasms; diagnostic imaging; carcinoma; renal cell

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Objectives The aims of this study were to evaluate the agreement of computed tomography (CT)-perfusion parameter values of the normal renal cortex and various renal tumors, which were obtained by different mathematical models, and to evaluate their diagnostic accuracy. Materials and Methods Perfusion imaging was performed prospectively in 35 patients to analyze 144 regions of interest of the normal renal cortex and 144 regions of interest of renal tumors, including 21 clear-cell renal cell carcinomas (RCC), 6 papillary RCCs, 5 oncocytomas, 1 chromophobe RCC, 1 angiomyolipoma with minimal fat, and 1 tubulocystic RCC. Identical source data were postprocessed and analyzed on 2 commercial software applications with the following implemented mathematical models: maximum slope, Patlak plot, standard singular-value decomposition (SVD), block-circulant SVD, oscillation-limited block-circulant SVD, and Bayesian estimation technique. Results for blood flow (BF), blood volume (BV), and mean transit time (MTT) were recorded. Agreement and correlation between pairs of models and perfusion parameters were assessed. Diagnostic accuracy was evaluated by receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis. Results Significant differences and poor agreement of BF, BV, and MTT values were noted for most of model comparisons in both the normal renal cortex and different renal tumors. The correlations between most model pairs and perfusion parameters ranged between good and perfect (Spearman = 0.79-1.00), except for BV values obtained by Patlak method ( = 0.61-0.72). All mathematical models computed BF and BV values, which differed significantly between clear cell RCCs, papillary RCCs, and oncocytomas, which introduces them as useful diagnostic tests to differentiate between different histologic subgroups (areas under ROC curve, 0.83-0.99). The diagnostic accuracy to discriminate between clear-cell RCCs and the renal cortex was the lowest based on the Patlak plot model (area under ROC curve, 0.76); BF and BV values obtained by other algorithms did not differ significantly in their diagnostic accuracy. Conclusions Quantitative perfusion parameters obtained from different mathematical models cannot be used interchangeably. Based on BF and BV estimates, all models are a useful tool in the differential diagnosis of kidney tumors, with the Patlak plot model yielding a significantly lower diagnostic accuracy.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available