Gadolinium-based contrast media does not improve the staging of neuroblastoma image-defined risk factors at diagnosis

PEDIATRIC BLOOD & CANCER(2024)

引用 0|浏览10
暂无评分
摘要
BackgroundNeuroblastoma risk stratification relies on prognostic risk factors and image-defined risk factors (IDRFs). Evaluating neuroblastoma typically involves magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) with gadolinium-based contrast media (GBCM, "contrast"). However, there are concerns regarding adverse effects and cost of GBCM. We aimed to assess the impact of intravenous GBCM on interobserver agreement for neuroblastoma staging on baseline MRI.ProcedureWe reviewed baseline MRI scans of 50 children with abdominopelvic neuroblastomas confirmed by histopathology. Duplicate sets of images were created, with post-contrast T1-weighted sequences removed from one set. Four pediatric radiologists independently analyzed the scans in a randomized manner. They recorded primary tumor size, presence of IDRFs, and metastatic lesions. Agreement among the reviewers was measured using kappa and Fleiss kappa statistics.ResultsMean age of included children was 3.3 years (range: 0.01-14.9 years), and 20 [40%] were females. Mean tumor size was 5.7 cm in greatest axial diameter. Pre-contrast versus post-contrast MRI showed excellent agreement for tumor measurement. Overlapping confidence intervals (CIs) were seen in nearly all categories of interobserver agreement on the presence or absence of individual IDRFs, with agreement ranging from poor to substantial, regardless of the presence of contrast. The overall interobserver agreement on the presence of at least one IDRF was substantial with contrast (kappa = .63; 95% CI: .52-.75) and moderate without contrast (kappa = .5; 95% CI: .39-.61); although the overlapping CIs suggest a lack of meaningful difference. Similarly, interobserver agreement on the presence or absence of individual sites of metastatic disease ranged from poor to substantial. The interobserver agreement on the overall determination of presence of metastatic disease was fair with contrast (kappa = .49; 95% CI: .38-.61) and moderate without contrast (kappa = .71; 95% CI: .59-.826).ConclusionsContrast does not improve tumor size measurement or radiologist agreement on the presence or absence of IDRFs or metastatic disease in children with newly diagnosed neuroblastoma.
更多
查看译文
关键词
neuroblastoma,radiology,surgery
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要