Erschienen in:
21.01.2019 | Special Section: Rectal Cancer
Diagnostic performance of magnetic resonance to assess treatment response after neoadjuvant therapy in patients with locally advanced rectal cancer
verfasst von:
Sergio Carlos Nahas, Caio Sergio Rizkallah Nahas, Gerson Montoya Cama, Rodrigo Lautert de Azambuja, Natally Horvat, Carlos Frederico Sparapan Marques, Marcos Roberto Menezes, Ulysses Ribeiro Junior, Ivan Cecconello
Erschienen in:
Abdominal Radiology
|
Ausgabe 11/2019
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Abstract
Purpose
Our study aimed to evaluate the diagnostic performance of rectal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for local restaging in patients with non-metastatic locally advanced rectal cancer (LARC) after neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy (CRT) using surgical histopathology of total mesorectal excision as the reference standard.
Methods
Ninety-five patients with LARC who underwent rectal MRI after CRT between January 2014 and December 2016 were included. Accuracy, sensitivity, specificity, positive, and negative predictive value for local staging regarding T-stage, N-stage, circumferential resection margin, and MRI tumor regression grade (ymriTRG) were calculated, and inter-test agreements were assessed.
Results
22/95 (23.2%) patients had radiological complete response (rCR), whereas 20/95 (21.1%) had pathological complete response (pCR). Among the patients with pCR, 11/20 (55%) had rCR. Fair agreement was demonstrated between ymriTRG and pathological TRG (ypTRG) (κ = 0.255). The sensitivity and specificity for detection of pCR were 61.1% (95% CI 35.7–82.7) and 89.6% (95% CI 80.6–95.4). For the detection of ypTRG grades 1 and 2, the corresponding values were 67.2% (95% CI 54.3–78.4) and 51.6 (95% CI 33.1–69.8). The accuracy of ymriTRG was 24.2% (95% CI 15.6–32.8). Inter-test agreement in TRG between MRI and pathology was overall fair (κ = 0.255) and slight (κ = 0.179), if TRG 1 + 2.
Conclusion
Qualitative assessment on MRI for diagnosing pCR showed moderate sensitivity and high specificity, whereas the diagnosis of TRG had moderate sensitivity and low specificity with slight to fair inter-test agreement when compared with pathological specimens.