• Identifying Feeding Arteries During TACE of Hepatic Tumors: Comparison of C-Arm CT and Digital Subtraction Angiography

    Jin Iwazawa, Shoichi Ohue, Takashi Mitani, Hisashi Abe, Naoko Hashimoto, Masao Hamuro, Kenji Nakamura

    OBJECTIVE. This study compares the diagnostic accuracy of C-arm CT with digital subtraction angiography (DSA) in identifying tumor-feeding arteries during superselective transarterial chemoembolization (TACE).

    MATERIALS AND METHODS.
    Thirty-three consecutive patients with hepatocellu­lar carcinoma (HCC) underwent superselective TACE using a flat-detector angiographic sys­tem. Angiographic operators determined which feeding arteries were potentially supplying the target tumor. When two or more feeding arteries were possible, all were included. Super-selective DSA and C-arm CT were sequentially performed for each studied artery. Four in­dependent observers separately viewed the DSA and C-arm CT images and used a 5-point grading scale to determine whether a studied artery supplied the target tumor. Diagnostic performance was compared using receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis. Sensitiv­ity, specificity, and accuracy were calculated for arteries rated as definite or probable tumor feeders. Iodized oil accumulation on follow-up CT was the reference standard.

    RESULTS.
    We examined 58 possible feeding arteries in 33 patients. Among the studied arteries, follow-up CT confirmed that 33 were verified tumor-feeding arteries, and the re­maining 25 were not. C-arm CT resulted in a significantly larger area under the ROC curve (Az = 0.995) compared with DSA (Az = 0.841). The sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of C-arm CT (96.9%, 97.0%, and 96.9%, respectively) were significantly higher than those for DSA (77.2%, 73.0%, and 75.4%).

    CONCLUSION.
    C-arm CT is superior to DSA for identifying tumor-feeding arteries during superselective TACE for HCC.