Publication

Dual-energy CT for characterization of the incidental adrenal mass: preliminary observations

Journal Paper/Review - Jan 1, 2012

Units
PubMed
Doi

Citation
Gnannt R, Fischer M, Goetti R, Karlo C, Leschka S, Alkadhi H. Dual-energy CT for characterization of the incidental adrenal mass: preliminary observations. AJR Am J Roentgenol 2012; 198:138-44.
Type
Journal Paper/Review (English)
Journal
AJR Am J Roentgenol 2012; 198
Publication Date
Jan 1, 2012
Issn Electronic
1546-3141
Pages
138-44
Brief description/objective

OBJECTIVE
The purpose of our study was to evaluate the accuracy of virtual unenhanced images reconstructed from contrast-enhanced dual-energy CT for the differentiation of incidental adrenal masses in comparison with standard unenhanced CT.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
One hundred-forty patients (mean age, 74±9 years) underwent unenhanced and contrast-enhanced CT of the abdomen, the latter acquired with dual-energy for reconstruction of virtual unenhanced images. Two blinded and independent readers (R1 and R2) measured attenuation of each incidental adrenal mass on standard unenhanced and virtual unenhanced images using an optimized dual-energy three-material decomposition algorithm.

RESULTS
Fifty-one incidental adrenal masses were found in 42 of 135 patients (31%); 39 incidental adrenal masses were ≥1 cm. On the basis of unenhanced CT, 29 of 51 incidental adrenal masses and 22 of 39 incidental adrenal masses≥1 cm were classified as benign (HU<10). Virtual unenhanced image quality was rated as good or with mild impairment (2.45±0.83 for R1, 2.45±0.99 for R2). Image noise was 12.7±3.6 HU in unenhanced images and 8.8±2.0 HU in virtual unenhanced images (p<0.001). There was no significant difference in incidental adrenal mass attenuation between unenhanced and virtual unenhanced images for all incidental adrenal masses (5.9±21.0 HU vs 7.0±20.6 HU, p=0.48) and for those≥1 cm (6.6±18.5 HU vs 7.9±18.3 HU, p=0.87). Sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of virtual unenhanced images for the characterization of incidental adrenal masses as probably benign were 76%, 82%, and 78% for R1 and 79%, 95%, and 86% for R2, respectively. For incidental adrenal masses≥1 cm, sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy increased to 95%, 100%, and 97% for R1 and 91%, 100%, and 95% for R2.

CONCLUSION
Reconstruction of virtual unenhanced images from contrast-enhanced dual-energy CT of the abdomen allows the characterization of the incidental adrenal masses with a good accuracy compared with standard unenhanced CT, with the most favorable results in incidental adrenal masses measuring≥1 cm.