A comparison of primary two- and three-dimensional methods to review CT colonography

Rogier E. van Gelder, Jasper Florie, C. Yung Nio, Sebastiaan Jensch, Steven W. de Jager, Frans M. Vos, Henk W. Venema, Joep F. Bartelsman, Johannes B. Reitsma, Patrick M. M. Bossuyt, Johan S. Laméris, Jaap Stoker

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Abstract

The aim of our study was to compare primary three-dimensional (3D) and primary two-dimensional (2D) review methods for CT colonography with regard to polyp detection and perceptive errors. CT colonography studies of 77 patients were read twice by three reviewers, first with a primary 3D method and then with a primary 2D method. Mean numbers of true and false positives, patient sensitivity and specificity and perceptive errors were calculated with colonoscopy as a reference standard. A perceptive error was made if a polyp was not detected by all reviewers. Mean sensitivity for large (> or = 10 mm) polyps for primary 3D and 2D review was 81% (14.7/18) and 70%(12.7/18), respectively (p-values > or = 0.25). Mean numbers of large false positives for primary 3D and 2D were 8.3 and 5.3, respectively. With primary 3D and 2D review 1 and 6 perceptive errors, respectively, were made in 18 large polyps (p = 0.06). For medium-sized (6-9 mm) polyps these values were for primary 3D and 2D, respectively: mean sensitivity: 67%(11.3/17) and 61%(10.3/17; p-values > or = 0.45), number of false positives: 33.3 and 15.6, and perceptive errors : 4 and 6 (p = 0.53). No significant differences were found in the detection of large and medium-sized polyps between primary 3D and 2D review
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1181-1192
JournalEuropean Radiology
Volume17
Issue number5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2007

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