• Differentiation of Small Hepatic Hemangioma from Small Hepatocellular Carcinoma: Recently Introduced Spectral CT Method

    Radiology: Volume 259: Number 3-June 2011

    Peijie Lv, MM Xiao Zhu Lin, MD Jianying Li, MD Weixia Li, MD Kemin Chen, MD

    Purpose: To investigate the usefulness of computed tomographic (CT) spectral imaging parameters in differentiating small (≤3 cm) hepatic hemangioma (HH) from small hepatocel­lular carcinoma (HCC), with or without cirrhosis, during the late arterial phase (AP) and portal venous phase (PVP).

    Materials and Methods: This prospective study was institutional review board ap­proved, and written informed consent was obtained from all patients. The authors examined 49 patients (39 men, 10 women; 65 lesions) with CT spectral imaging during the AP and the PVP. Twenty-one patients had HH; nine, HCC with cirrhosis; and 19, HCC without cirrhosis. Iodine concentrations were derived from iodine-based material-decomposition CT images and normalized to the iodine concentration in the aorta. The difference in io­dine concentration between the AP and PVP (ie, iodine concentration difference [ICD]) and the lesion-to-normal parenchyma ratio (LNR) were calculated. Two readers qualitatively assessed lesion types on the basis of con­ventional CT characteristics. Sensitivity and specificity were compared between the qualitative and quantitative studies. The two-sample t test was performed to compare quantitative parameters between HH and HCC.

    Results: Normalized iodine concentrations (NICs) and LNRs in pa­tients with HH differed significantly from those in patients with HCC and cirrhosis and those in patients with HCC without cirrhosis: Mean NICs were 0.47 mg/mL ±0.24 (standard deviation) versus 0.23 mg/mL ± 0.10 and 0.23 mg/mL ± 0.08, respectively, during the AP and 0.83 mg/mL ± 0.38 versus 0.47 mg/mL ± 0.86 and 0.52 mg/mL ± 0.11, respectively, during the PVP. Mean LNRs were 5.87 ± 3.36 versus 2.56 ± 1.10 and 2.29 ± 0.87, respectively, during the AP and 2.01 ± 1.33 versus 0.96 ± 0.16 and 0.93 ± 0.26, respectively, during the PVP. The mean ICD for the HH group (1.37 mg/mL ± 0.84) was significantly higher than the mean ICDs for the HCC-cirrhosis (0.33 mg/mL ± 0.29) (P < .001) and HCC-no cirrhosis (0.82 mg/mL ± 0.99) (P = .03) groups. The com­bination of NIC and LNR had higher sensitivity and speci­ficity compared with those of conventional qualitative CT image analysis during individual and combined phases.

    Conclusion: Use of spectral CT with fast tube voltage switching may increase the sensitivity for differentiating small heman­giomas from small HCCs in two-phase scanning.