Hepatic metastasis detection: comparison of three CT contrast enhancement methods.

Abstract
A prospective, blinded comparison of three methods of hepatic contrast enhancement in computed tomography (CT) was conducted in 15 patients with colorectal carcinoma metastatic to the liver. Arterial portography (AP-CT) was performed with injection of contrast material with injection of contrast material into the superior mesenteric artery during CT. Delayed scanning (DS-CT) was performed 4 hours after intravascular administration of contrast material (mean dose, 280 mL). CT with an ethiodized oil emulsion (EOE-CT) was performed 1 hour after slow intravenous infusion of the emulsion. All patients underwent laparotomy following imaging studies. A lesion-by-lesion analysis of 56 metastases showed no significant differences in sensitivity (AP-CT, 77%; DS-CT, 83%; EOE-CT, 82%), but the false-positive rate for AP-CT was significantly higher than that for DS-CT (P < .001) or EOE-CT (P < .01). False-positive rates for EOE-CT and DS-CT were not significantly different. The predictive value of a positive test was 63% for AP-CT, 90% for DS-CT, and 81% for EOE-CT. AP-CT does not appear to be clinically useful for detection of hepatic metastases because of the high false-positive rate. No difference could be demonstrated between DS-CT and EOE-CT. DS-CT is a valuable method for hepatic contrast enhancement.