Erschienen in:
01.03.2006 | Urogenital
Adrenal masses falsely diagnosed as adenomas on unenhanced and delayed contrast-enhanced computed tomography: Pathological correlation
verfasst von:
Byung Kwan Park, Bohyun Kim, Kyungran Ko, Sun Young Jeong, Ghee Young Kwon
Erschienen in:
European Radiology
|
Ausgabe 3/2006
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Abstract
Objectives
To assess the accuracy of CT for the diagnosis of histologically confirmed adrenal adenoma and nonadenoma using CT numbers.
Materials and methods
Our study included 91 adrenal masses in 83 patients; histopathological diagnoses were 45 adenomas, 31 pheochromocytomas, 6 hyperplasias, 4 metastasis, and 5 miscellaneous lesions. Unenhanced CT in 46 patients and unenhanced and delayed contrast-enhanced (DCE) CT in 37 patients were retrospectively reviewed to examine the correlation between CT findings and those on pathological examination and to obtain diagnostic accuracy.
Results
Sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy for adenoma were 40% (18/45), 91% (42/46), and 66% (60/91) with unenhanced CT, and 96% (24/25), 61% (11/18), and 81% (35/43) with DCE CT. Adrenal masses falsely diagnosed as adenoma on unenhanced CT included three hyperplasias and one endothelial cyst, and those falsely diagnosed as adenoma on DCE CT were five pheochromocytomas, one oncocytic coritical tumor, and one primary pigmented nodular adrenocortical dysplasia. Twenty-five lipid-poor adenomas were falsely diagnosed as nonadenomas on unenhanced CT and one degenerated adenoma both on unenhanced CT and on DCE CT.
Conclusion
Diagnosing adenoma merely on CT numbers can lead to misdiagnosis. The lower specificity than expected is due to pheochromocytomas presenting as false positives.