Adrenal nodule: does computed tomography outperform chemical shift magnetic resonance imaging in differentiating benign versus malignant?

Abstract Background The radiologist faces the dilemma of characterizing adrenal lesions, especially in oncology patients, as this finding can alter the patient’s management and prognosis. The objectives of this study were (1) to evaluate and compare the diagnostic accuracy of CT and MRI in distingui...

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Main Authors: Noble Charles, Nilkanth Pal, Jeevan Vernekar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2025-04-01
Series:African Journal of Urology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12301-025-00499-6
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author Noble Charles
Nilkanth Pal
Jeevan Vernekar
author_facet Noble Charles
Nilkanth Pal
Jeevan Vernekar
author_sort Noble Charles
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background The radiologist faces the dilemma of characterizing adrenal lesions, especially in oncology patients, as this finding can alter the patient’s management and prognosis. The objectives of this study were (1) to evaluate and compare the diagnostic accuracy of CT and MRI in distinguishing benign adrenal adenomas from malignant masses employing CT adrenal protocol and Chemical shift Imaging (CSI) in MR scans, and (2) to establish a standard reporting approach/chart/algorithm for adrenal lesions based on the findings of the CT scan and/or MRI. Methods This prospective study data was obtained from 80 patients. On CT scan, the unenhanced HU value, absolute, and relative percentage washout were calculated using a 10-min delay. On MRI, signal loss on chemical shift images was visualized and quantified. Benign lesion −< 10 HU on an unenhanced scan, macroscopic fat, homogenous attenuation value, no enhancement, APW/RPW of 52%/37%, stable over a 1-year interval, loss of signal on CSI with SII of > 16.5%. The rest were either confirmed by biopsy or resection. Results Benign adenomas were the most common, the majority being lipid-rich. Sensitivities and specificities—cut-off size of 4 cm (85%, 77%), cut off < 10 HU (76%, 78%), homogenous enhancement (100%, 78%), APW (88% 85%), RPW (94%, 85%), CSI (88%, 90%). RPW is a statistically significant parameter for characterizing adenomas from non-adenomas. Washout parameters tend to outperform CS-MRI when the density of the adenoma is on the higher side. Conclusions CT and MRI have good accuracy in characterizing an adrenal lesion. In clinical practice, CT can be considered as a one-stop and first-line modality for adrenal imaging. Diagnoses on imaging alleviate the need for biopsies in a large number of patients.
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spelling doaj-art-a2c5a7aa29b84f6284c5a8e258d6d7122025-08-20T03:06:50ZengSpringerOpenAfrican Journal of Urology1961-99872025-04-0131111310.1186/s12301-025-00499-6Adrenal nodule: does computed tomography outperform chemical shift magnetic resonance imaging in differentiating benign versus malignant?Noble Charles0Nilkanth Pal1Jeevan Vernekar2Goa Medical CollegeGoa Medical CollegeGoa Medical CollegeAbstract Background The radiologist faces the dilemma of characterizing adrenal lesions, especially in oncology patients, as this finding can alter the patient’s management and prognosis. The objectives of this study were (1) to evaluate and compare the diagnostic accuracy of CT and MRI in distinguishing benign adrenal adenomas from malignant masses employing CT adrenal protocol and Chemical shift Imaging (CSI) in MR scans, and (2) to establish a standard reporting approach/chart/algorithm for adrenal lesions based on the findings of the CT scan and/or MRI. Methods This prospective study data was obtained from 80 patients. On CT scan, the unenhanced HU value, absolute, and relative percentage washout were calculated using a 10-min delay. On MRI, signal loss on chemical shift images was visualized and quantified. Benign lesion −< 10 HU on an unenhanced scan, macroscopic fat, homogenous attenuation value, no enhancement, APW/RPW of 52%/37%, stable over a 1-year interval, loss of signal on CSI with SII of > 16.5%. The rest were either confirmed by biopsy or resection. Results Benign adenomas were the most common, the majority being lipid-rich. Sensitivities and specificities—cut-off size of 4 cm (85%, 77%), cut off < 10 HU (76%, 78%), homogenous enhancement (100%, 78%), APW (88% 85%), RPW (94%, 85%), CSI (88%, 90%). RPW is a statistically significant parameter for characterizing adenomas from non-adenomas. Washout parameters tend to outperform CS-MRI when the density of the adenoma is on the higher side. Conclusions CT and MRI have good accuracy in characterizing an adrenal lesion. In clinical practice, CT can be considered as a one-stop and first-line modality for adrenal imaging. Diagnoses on imaging alleviate the need for biopsies in a large number of patients.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12301-025-00499-6Adrenal adenomaAlgorithmAbsolute percentage washoutChemical shift imagingRelative percentage washoutSignal intensity index
spellingShingle Noble Charles
Nilkanth Pal
Jeevan Vernekar
Adrenal nodule: does computed tomography outperform chemical shift magnetic resonance imaging in differentiating benign versus malignant?
African Journal of Urology
Adrenal adenoma
Algorithm
Absolute percentage washout
Chemical shift imaging
Relative percentage washout
Signal intensity index
title Adrenal nodule: does computed tomography outperform chemical shift magnetic resonance imaging in differentiating benign versus malignant?
title_full Adrenal nodule: does computed tomography outperform chemical shift magnetic resonance imaging in differentiating benign versus malignant?
title_fullStr Adrenal nodule: does computed tomography outperform chemical shift magnetic resonance imaging in differentiating benign versus malignant?
title_full_unstemmed Adrenal nodule: does computed tomography outperform chemical shift magnetic resonance imaging in differentiating benign versus malignant?
title_short Adrenal nodule: does computed tomography outperform chemical shift magnetic resonance imaging in differentiating benign versus malignant?
title_sort adrenal nodule does computed tomography outperform chemical shift magnetic resonance imaging in differentiating benign versus malignant
topic Adrenal adenoma
Algorithm
Absolute percentage washout
Chemical shift imaging
Relative percentage washout
Signal intensity index
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12301-025-00499-6
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AT nilkanthpal adrenalnoduledoescomputedtomographyoutperformchemicalshiftmagneticresonanceimagingindifferentiatingbenignversusmalignant
AT jeevanvernekar adrenalnoduledoescomputedtomographyoutperformchemicalshiftmagneticresonanceimagingindifferentiatingbenignversusmalignant