Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine (Mar 2022)

Prediction of vascular invasion using a 7‐point scale computed tomography grading system in adrenal tumors in dogs

  • Pascaline Pey,
  • Swan Specchi,
  • Federica Rossi,
  • Alessia Diana,
  • Ignazio Drudi,
  • Allison L. Zwingenberger,
  • Philipp D. Mayhew,
  • Luciano Pisoni,
  • Daniele Mari,
  • Federico Massari,
  • Boris Dalpozzo,
  • Federico Fracassi,
  • Stefano Nicoli

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/jvim.16371
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 36, no. 2
pp. 713 – 725

Abstract

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Abstract Background Previous studies evaluating the accuracy of computed tomography (CT) in detecting caudal vena cava (CVC) invasion by adrenal tumors (AT) used a binary system and did not evaluate for other vessels. Objective Test a 7‐point scale CT grading system for accuracy in predicting vascular invasion and for repeatability among radiologists. Build a decision tree based on CT criteria to predict tumor type. Methods Retrospective observational cross‐sectional case study. Abdominal CT studies were analyzed by 3 radiologists using a 7‐point CT grading scale for vascular invasion and by 1 radiologist for CT features of AT. Animals Dogs with AT that underwent adrenalectomy and had pre‐ and postcontrast CT. Results Ninety‐one dogs; 45 adrenocortical carcinomas (50%), 36 pheochromocytomas (40%), 9 adrenocortical adenomas (10%) and 1 unknown tumor. Carcinoma and pheochromocytoma differed in pre‐ and postcontrast attenuation, contralateral adrenal size, tumor thrombus short‐ and long‐axis, and tumor and thrombus mineralization. A decision tree was built based on these differences. Adenoma and malignant tumors differed in contour irregularity. Probability of vascular invasion was dependent on CT grading scale, and a large equivocal zone existed between 3 and 6 scores, lowering CT accuracy to detect vascular invasion. Radiologists' agreement for detecting abnormalities (evaluated by chance‐corrected weighted kappa statistics) was excellent for CVC and good to moderate for other vessels. The quality of postcontrast CT study had a negative impact on radiologists' performance and agreement. Conclusions and Clinical Importance Features of CT may help radiologists predict AT type and provide probabilistic information on vascular invasion.

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