Accuracy of contrast-enhanced CT in liver neoplasms in children under 2 years age
Background Multiple differentials exist for pediatric liver tumors under 2 years. Accurate imaging diagnosis may obviate the need for tissue sampling in most cases. Objective To evaluate the imaging features and diagnostic accuracy of computed tomography (CT) in liver tumors in children under 2 year...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Pediatric radiology 2024-11, Vol.54 (12), p.1946-1955 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Background
Multiple differentials exist for pediatric liver tumors under 2 years. Accurate imaging diagnosis may obviate the need for tissue sampling in most cases.
Objective
To evaluate the imaging features and diagnostic accuracy of computed tomography (CT) in liver tumors in children under 2 years.
Methods
Eighty-eight children under 2 years with treatment naive liver neoplasms and baseline contrast-enhanced CT were included in this institutional review board approved retrospective study. Two blinded onco-radiologists assessed these tumors in consensus. Findings assessed included enhancement pattern, lobulated appearance, cystic change, calcifications, central scar-like appearance, and metastases. The radiologists classified the lesion as hepatoblastoma, infantile hemangioma, mesenchymal hamartoma, rhabdoid tumor, or indeterminate, first based purely on imaging and then after alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) correlation. Multivariate analysis and methods of comparing means and frequencies were used for statistical analysis wherever applicable. Diagnostic accuracy, sensitivity, and positive predictive values were analyzed.
Results
The mean age of the sample was 11.4 months (95% CI, 10.9–11.8) with 50/88 (57%) boys. The study included 72 hepatoblastomas, 6 hemangiomas, 4 mesenchymal hamartomas, and 6 rhabdoid tumors. Presence of calcifications, multilobular pattern of arterial enhancement, lobulated morphology, and central scar-like appearance was significantly associated with hepatoblastomas (
P
-value 0.05) after AFP correlation, with one hepatoblastoma misdiagnosed as a rhabdoid tumor. If indeterminate lesions were excluded for biopsy, the accuracy would be 98.8% (95% CI, 93.4–99.9%).
Conclusion
CT had high accuracy for diagnosing liver neoplasms in the under 2-year age population after AFP correlation. Certain imaging features were significantly associated with the diagnosis of hepatoblastoma. A policy of biopsying only indeterminate lesions after CT and AFP correlation would avoid sampling in the majority of patients.
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ISSN: | 1432-1998 0301-0449 1432-1998 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00247-024-05958-w |