PLoS ONE (Jan 2021)

Quantitative analysis of dynamic computed tomography angiography for the detection of endoleaks after abdominal aorta aneurysm endovascular repair: A feasibility study.

  • Georg Apfaltrer,
  • Francesco Lavra,
  • U Joseph Schoepf,
  • Marco Scarabello,
  • Ricardo Yamada,
  • Marly van Assen,
  • Akos Varga-Szemes,
  • Brian E Jacobs,
  • Maximilian J Bauer,
  • William T Greenberg,
  • Marcelo Guimaraes,
  • Luca Saba,
  • Carlo N De Cecco

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0245134
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 1
p. e0245134

Abstract

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ObjectivesTo assess the feasibility of quantitative analysis of dynamic computed tomography angiography (dCTA) for the detection of endoleaks in patients who underwent endovascular repair of abdominal aortic aneurysms (EVAR).Material and methodsTwenty patients scheduled for contrast-enhanced CT angiography (CTA) of the abdominal aorta post-EVAR were prospectively enrolled. All patients received a standard triphasic CTA protocol, followed by an additional dCTA. The dCTA acquisition enabled reconstruction of color-coded maps depicting blood perfusion and a dCTA dataset of the aneurysm sac. Observers assessed the dCTA and dynamic CT perfusion (dCTP) images for the detection of endoleaks, establishing diagnostic confidence based on a modified 5-point Likert scale. An index was calculated for the ratio between the endoleak and aneurysm sac using blood flow for dCTP and Hounsfield units (HU) for dCTA. The Wilcoxon test compared the endoleak index and the diagnostic confidence of the observers.ResultsIn total, 19 patients (18 males, median age 74 years [70.5-75.7]) were included for analysis. Nine endoleaks were detected in 7 patients using triphasic CTA as the reference standard. There was complete agreement for endoleak detection between the two techniques on a per-patient basis. Both dCTA and dCTP identified an additional endoleak in one patient. The diagnostic confidence using dCTP for detection of endoleaks was not significantly superior to dCTA (5.0 [5-5] vs. 4.5 [4-5], respectively; p = 0.11); however, dCTP demonstrated superior diagnostic confidence for endoleak exclusion compared to dCTA (1.0 [1-1] vs 1.5 [1.5-1.5], respectively; p ConclusionsQuantitative analysis of dCTP imaging can aid in the detection of endoleaks and demonstrates a higher endoleak detection rate than triphasic CTA, as well as a strong correlation with visual assessment of dCTA images.