Comparison of contrast-enhanced Ultrasonography vs. Baseline Ultrasound and contrast-enhanced Computed Tomography in metastatic disease of the liver: diagnostic performance and confidence.
Aim: The aim of this study
was to compare contrast-enhanced
ultrasonography (CEUS) to baseline
US and contrast-enhanced computed
tomography (CT) in metastatic disease
of the liver diagnosed or suspected by
US during presurgical staging or
postsurgical follow-up for primary
malignancies.
Materials and methods:
Two hundred-fifty-three patients considered
suitable for US due to the
complete explorability of the liver and
with one to five proven or suspected
liver metastases at baseline US were
included. All patients underwent US
before and after microbubble injection,
and multiphase contrast-enhanced
CT. Independent panels of
readers reviewed US and CTscans and
recorded liver metastases according to
a 5-grade scale of diagnostic confidence.
Sensitivity, specificity (diagnostic
performance) and area under
the receiver operating characteristics
(ROC) curve (diagnostic confidence)
were calculated.
Results: Reference
standards revealed no metastases in
57/253, more than five in 59/253, and
one to five in 137/253 patients. In
patients with one to five metastases,
CEUS versus baseline US revealed
more metastases in 64/137 and the
same number in 73/137 patients while
CEUS versus CT revealed more metastases
in 10/137, the same number in
99/137, and lower number in 28/137.
Sensitivity, specificity, and area under
ROC curve of CEUS (83%, 84%,
0.929, respectively) differed from
baseline US (40%, 63%, 0.579, respectively;
P<0.01) while did not
differ from CT (89%, 89%, 0.945,
respectively; P>0.05).
Conclusion: CEUS improved liver metastases diagnosis
in comparison with baseline
US while it revealed similar diagnostic
performance and confidence to contrast-
enhanced CT in patients considered
suitable for US and with proven
or suspected liver metastases at baseline
US.