Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 2008; 56(8): 471-475
DOI: 10.1055/s-2008-1038887
Original Thoracic

© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Diagnosis of Pulmonary Metastases with Helical CT: The Effect of Imaging Techniques

J. Pfannschmidt1 , M. Bischoff1 , T. Muley1 , J. Kunz2 , P. Zamecnik3 , P. A. Schnabel4 , H. Hoffmann1 , H. Dienemann1 , C. P. Heussel2
  • 1Department of Surgery, Thoraxklinik am Universitätsklinikum, Heidelberg, Germany
  • 2Department of Radiology, Thoraxklinik am Universitätsklinikum, Heidelberg, Germany
  • 3Department of Radiology, German Cancer Research Institute Heidelberg (DKFZ), Heidelberg, Germany
  • 4Department of Pathology, University Hospital, Heidelberg, Germany
Further Information

Publication History

received July 2, 2008

Publication Date:
14 November 2008 (online)

Abstract

Objective: Survival in patients after surgical resection of pulmonary metastases correlates with the complete resection of all metastatic deposits. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the additional value of helical CT to see whether the slice thickness and the reading environment was a factor determining the accuracy of helical scans.

Methods: Between 2004 and 2007, 93 patients (62 men, 31 women) underwent complete resection of pulmonary metastases by open thoracotomy. A total of 125 thoracotomies were performed with manual palpation of the involved lung. We retrospectively examined the helical CT findings obtained using a 5-mm slice thickness in a routine preoperative analysis, and within this study a second reading was performed independently, using 3-mm slice thickness image sets. The CT images were evaluated in a consensus between two radiologists.

Results: Computed tomography scanning was performed a median of 12 days before thoracotomy (range 1–121 days). Analysis of helical CT in 5-mm slice thickness detected metastases with a sensitivity of 83.7 % whereas a 3-mm slice thickness had a sensitivity of 88.8 %. There were statistically significantly more lesions using helical CT and a 3-mm slice thickness technique than with the 5-mm slice thickness technique, compared to the surgical results (p = 0.002). This was also found with regard to nodules which were finally histologically confirmed as lung metastases (p = 0.014).

Conclusions: We conclude that a reduced slice thickness may have an important positive impact on the treatment and outcome of patients with pulmonary metastases. The use of 3-mm slice thickness helical CT may raise the sensitivity for pulmonary metastases detection compared to 5-mm images, but the rate of false positive results may also increase.

References

  • 1 Sternberg D I, Sonett J R. Surgical therapy of lung metastases.  Semin Oncol. 2007;  34 (3) 186-196
  • 2 Pfannschmidt J, Dienemann H, Hoffmann H. Surgical resection of pulmonary metastases from colorectal cancer: a systematic review of published series.  Ann Thorac Surg. 2007;  84 (1) 324-338
  • 3 Seltzer S E, Judy P F, Adams D F. et al . Spiral CT of the chest: comparison of cine and film-based viewing.  Radiology. 1995;  197 (1) 73-78
  • 4 Paranjpe D V, Bergin C J. Spiral CT of the lungs: optimal technique and resolution compared with conventional CT.  AJR Am J Roentgenol. 1994;  162 (3) 561-567
  • 5 Croisille P, Souto M, Cova M. et al . Pulmonary nodules: improved detection with vascular segmentation and extraction with spiral CT. Work in progress.  Radiology. 1995;  197 (2) 397-401
  • 6 Margaritora S, Porziella V, D'Andrilli A. et al . Pulmonary metastases: can accurate radiological evaluation avoid thoracotomic approach?.  Eur J Cardiothorac Surg. 2002;  21 (6) 1111-1114
  • 7 Parsons A M, Detterbeck F C, Parker L A. Accuracy of helical CT in the detection of pulmonary metastases: is intraoperative palpation still necessary?.  Ann Thorac Surg. 2004;  78 (6) 1910-1916 1916-1918
  • 8 Parsons A M, Ennis E K, Yankaskas B C, Parker Jr L A, Hyslop W B, Detterbeck F C. Helical computed tomography inaccuracy in the detection of pulmonary metastases: can it be improved?.  Ann Thorac Surg. 2007;  84 (6) 1830-1836
  • 9 Diederich S, Semik M, Lentschig M G. et al . Helical CT of pulmonary nodules in patients with extrathoracic malignancy: CT-surgical correlation.  AJR Am J Roentgenol. 1999;  172 (2) 353-360
  • 10 Waters D J, Coakley F V, Cohen M D. et al . The detection of pulmonary metastases by helical CT: a clinicopathologic study in dogs.  J Comput Assist Tomogr. 1998;  22 (2) 235-240
  • 11 Kayton M L, Huvos A G, Casher J. et al . Computed tomographic scan of the chest underestimates the number of metastatic lesions in osteosarcoma.  J Pediatr Surg. 2006;  41 (1) 200-206 200-206
  • 12 Fischbach F, Knollmann F, Griesshaber V, Freund T, Akkol E, Felix R. Detection of pulmonary nodules by multislice computed tomography: improved detection rate with reduced slice thickness.  Eur Radiol. 2003;  13 (10) 2378-2383

Dr. MD Joachim Pfannschmidt

Thoraxklinik am Universitätsklinikum
Department of Surgery

Amalienstr. 5

69126 Heidelberg

Germany

Fax: + 49 (0) 62 21 39 65 43

Email: joachim.pfannschmidt@thoraxklinik-heidelberg.de

    >