Hricak Hedvig, Gatsonis Constantine, Chi Dennis S, Amendola Marco A, Brandt Kathy, Schwartz Lawrence H, Koelliker Susan, Siegelman Evan S, Brown Jeffrey J, McGhee Robert B, Iyer Revathy, Vitellas Kenneth M, Snyder Bradley, Long Harry J, Fiorica James V, Mitchell Donald G
Department of Radiology, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY 10021, USA.
J Clin Oncol. 2005 Dec 20;23(36):9329-37. doi: 10.1200/JCO.2005.02.0354.
To compare magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and computed tomography (CT) with each other and to International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics (FIGO) clinical staging in the pretreatment evaluation of early invasive cervical cancer, using surgicopathologic findings as the reference standard.
This prospective multicenter clinical study was conducted by the American College of Radiology Imaging Network and the Gynecologic Oncology Group from March 2000 to November 2002; 25 United States health centers enrolled 208 consecutive patients with biopsy-confirmed cervical cancer of FIGO stage > or = IB who were scheduled for surgery based on clinical assessment. Patients underwent FIGO clinical staging, helical CT, and MRI. Surgicopathologic findings constituted the reference standard for statistical analysis.
Complete data were available for 172 patients; surgicopathologic findings were consistent with FIGO stages IA to IIA in 76% and stage > or = IIB in 21%. For the detection of advanced stage (> or = IIB), sensitivity was poor for FIGO clinical staging (29%), CT (42%), and MRI (53%); specificity was 99% for FIGO clinical staging, 82% for CT, and 74% for MRI; and negative predictive value was 84% for FIGO clinical staging, 84% for CT, and 85% for MRI. MRI (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve [AUC], 0.88) was significantly better than CT (AUC, 0.73) for detecting cervical tumors (P = .014). For 85% of patients, FIGO clinical staging forms were submitted after MRI and/or CT was performed.
CT and MRI performed similarly; both had lower staging accuracy than in prior single-institution studies. Accuracy of FIGO clinical staging was higher than previously reported. The temporal data suggest that FIGO clinical staging was influenced by CT and MRI findings.
以手术病理结果作为参考标准,比较磁共振成像(MRI)和计算机断层扫描(CT)以及国际妇产科联盟(FIGO)临床分期在早期浸润性宫颈癌术前评估中的应用。
本前瞻性多中心临床研究由美国放射学会影像网络和妇科肿瘤学组于2000年3月至2002年11月开展;25家美国医疗中心连续纳入208例经活检确诊为FIGO分期≥IB期宫颈癌的患者,这些患者根据临床评估计划接受手术。患者接受FIGO临床分期、螺旋CT和MRI检查。手术病理结果构成统计分析的参考标准。
172例患者有完整数据;手术病理结果与FIGO分期IA至IIA期相符的占76%,与分期≥IIB期相符的占21%。对于晚期(≥IIB期)的检测,FIGO临床分期的敏感性较差(29%),CT为42%,MRI为53%;FIGO临床分期的特异性为99%,CT为82%,MRI为74%;FIGO临床分期的阴性预测值为84%,CT为84%,MRI为85%。在检测宫颈肿瘤方面,MRI(受试者操作特征曲线下面积[AUC],0.88)显著优于CT(AUC,0.73)(P = 0.014)。85%的患者在进行MRI和/或CT检查后提交了FIGO临床分期表格。
CT和MRI表现相似;两者的分期准确性均低于先前的单机构研究。FIGO临床分期的准确性高于先前报道。时间数据表明FIGO临床分期受CT和MRI结果的影响。