Differentiation between hepatic cyst and hemangioma: additive value of breath-hold, multisection fluid-attenuated inversion-recovery magnetic resonance imaging using half-Fourier acquisition single-shot turbo-spin-echo sequence.

Journal: Journal Of Magnetic Resonance Imaging : JMRI
Published:
Abstract

Objective: To evaluate the additive value of breath-hold, multisection fluid-attenuated inversion-recovery (FLAIR) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) using half-Fourier acquisition single-shot turbo-spin-echo (HASTE) sequence as supplements to moderately and heavily T2-weighted fast-spin-echo (FSE) sequences in differentiating hepatic cyst from hemangioma.

Methods: A total of 183 lesions (127 hepatic cysts, 56 hepatic hemangiomas) in 117 patients were evaluated in this study. Three radiologists independently reviewed FLAIR MR images using a HASTE sequence and T2-weighted FSE MR images. Each radiologist used a five-point scale to rate his confidence in determination of hepatic cyst and hemangioma.

Results: All three reviewers were significantly better able to differentiate hepatic cyst from hepatic hemangioma with the combination of FLAIR imaging using HASTE and moderately and heavily T2-weighted FSE images (area under the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve, 0.99 for each reader) than with moderately and heavily T2-weighted FSE images alone (0.82-0.93; P < 0.05). FLAIR-HASTE imaging in addition to T2-weighted FSE sequences improved the diagnostic performance, including the sensitivity, specificity, accuracy, and confident diagnosis in the differentiation between hepatic hemangiomas and cysts.

Conclusions: FLAIR-HASTE imaging is useful for distinguishing hepatic hemangioma from hepatic cyst without the use of contrast-enhanced MR images.

Authors
Katsumi Sasaki, Katsuyoshi Ito, Shinji Koike, Takeshi Fujita, Hajime Okazaki, Naofumi Matsunaga