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Intraoperative Shear Wave Elastography vs. Contrast-Enhanced Ultrasound for the Characterization and Differentiation of Focal Liver Lesions to Optimize Liver Tumor Surgery.

PURPOSE:  Assessment of intraoperative quantitative shear wave elastography (SWE) and contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) for the characterization of focal liver lesions (FLLs) during liver surgery using postoperative histopathological results as the gold standard.

MATERIALS AND METHODS:  US data of 79 consecutive patients with 98 FLLs who underwent liver surgery between 08/2015 - 06/2017 were prospectively acquired and retrospectively analyzed. Multifrequency linear/T-shaped probes (6 - 9 MHz) were used to store cine loops of at least 5 s and images of B-mode, SWE and CEUS. The first CEUS loop was continuously documented over 1 min. in each case. Quantitative SWE analysis of FLLs was performed by placing 5 regions of interest to measure shear wave speed (m/s) and stiffness (kPa). CEUS was evaluated during the arterial, portal venous and late phase after i. v. bolus injections of 2.4 - 10 ml sulfur hexafluoride microbubbles. Postoperative histopathology after tumor resection or intraoperative biopsy was obtained to confirm findings of SWE and CEUS.

RESULTS:  Of 98 FLLs in 79 patients (mean age: 58 years sd ± 12y) 88 were malignant and 10 were benign ranging from 0.69 to 15.2 cm in size (mean: 2.8 cm, sd ± 2.25 cm). SWE characterized 73/88 FLLs correctly as malignant and 7/10 as benign using a cut-off value of 2.5 m/s/21.3 kPa (p < 0.0005). The sensitivity was 83 %, specificity 70 %, accuracy 82 %. CEUS could correctly identify 86/88 malignant and 8/10 benign FLLs. The sensitivity was 98 %, specificity 80 %, accuracy 96 %. SWE could correctly identify 2 malignant FLLs which CEUS falsely characterized as benign.

CONCLUSION:  Intraoperative CEUS and SWE are excellent tools for the highly accurate visualization, characterization and malignancy assessment of hepatic tumors during liver surgery.

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