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- Title
CT imaging comparison between intraductal papillary neoplasms of the bile duct and papillary cholangiocarcinomas.
- Authors
Komori, Takahiro; Inoue, Dai; Zen, Yoh; Yoneda, Norihide; Kitao, Azusa; Kozaka, Kazuto; Yokka, Akira; Toshima, Fumihito; Matsubara, Takashi; Kobayashi, Satoshi; Gabata, Toshifumi
- Abstract
<bold>Objectives: </bold>To identify imaging features that assist in discriminating intraductal papillary neoplasms of the bile duct (IPNBs) from papillary cholangiocarcinomas (PCCs).<bold>Methods: </bold>This study was approved by the institutional review board. Using the recently proposed histological diagnostic criteria for biliary papillary neoplasms, IPNBs and PCCs were selected from 537 biliary neoplasms consecutively resected in a 12.5-year period. Clinical and imaging features were compared between the two groups.<bold>Results: </bold>The histology review identified 19 IPNBs and 48 PCCs, representing an estimated prevalence of IPNBs among biliary neoplasms of 4%. Approximately one half of IPNBs were incidentally found on imaging conducted for other purposes. In terms of tumor location, 15/19 IPNBs (79%) developed in intrahepatic bile ducts, and 41/48 PCCs (85%) in the distal bile duct. Cystic appearance was highly suggestive for IPNBs (p < 0.001). Using these two parameters, 78% of papillary bile duct neoplasms could be classified into IPNBs or PCCs. Other imaging findings favoring IPNBs included frond-like mural nodule, downstream bile duct dilatation, and the lack of abnormal enhancement in the adjacent bile duct. Interestingly, two patients with non-invasive or microinvasive IPNB had undergone abdominal imaging studies > 3 years before, and a retrospective review of the previous images identified small nodular or cystic lesions, suggesting a less progressive nature of IPNBs than currently thought.<bold>Conclusions: </bold>Imaging findings useful for discriminating IPNBs from PCCs appear to be tumor location, shape of tumor, appearance of mural nodules, duct dilatation at unaffected duct, and abnormal enhancement of the adjacent bile duct.<bold>Key Points: </bold>• Intrahepatic location and cystic dilatation of the affected bile duct are the strong discriminators between IPNBs and PCCs. • The shape of the mural nodule and appearance of the neighboring bile duct are helpful for distinguishing IPNBs and PCCs. • The less aggressive behavior of IPNBs compared with PCCs may facilitate less invasive management in patients with IPNB.
- Subjects
BILE ducts; INTRAHEPATIC bile ducts; TUMORS; DIAGNOSTIC imaging; CANCER invasiveness
- Publication
European Radiology, 2019, Vol 29, Issue 6, p3132
- ISSN
0938-7994
- Publication type
journal article
- DOI
10.1007/s00330-018-5841-0