Shuai RenXiao ChenZhonglan WangRui ZhaoJianhua WangWenjing CuiZhongqiu WangZhongqiu WangZhongqiu Wang
Hypovascular pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (hypo-PNETs) are often misdiagnosed as pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC). However, the treatment options and prognosis of PNETs and PDAC are substantially different. This retrospective study differentiated hypo-PNETs from PDAC using contrast-enhanced CT (CE-CT). Clinical data and CE-CT findings, including tumor location, size, boundary, pancreatic duct dilatation, local invasion or metastases, tumor contrast enhancement, and tumor-to-pancreas enhancement ratio, were compared between 39 PDACs and 18 hypo-PNETs. At CT imaging, hypo-PNETs showed a higher frequency of a well-defined margin and lower frequencies of pancreatic duct dilatation and local invasion or metastasis when compared with PDAC (p < 0.05 for all). The mean attenuation of hypo-PNETs at the arterial and portal venous phase was significantly higher than that of PDAC (p < 0.001, p = 0.003, respectively). Similar results were observed in tumor-to-pancreas enhancement ratio. Tumor attenuation and tumor-to-pancreas enhancement ratio at the arterial phase showed the largest area under the curve (AUC) of 0.888 and 0.812 with 83.3-88.9% of sensitivity and 61.6-77.0% of specificity. Pancreatic duct dilatation, local invasion or metastasis, and tumor attenuation at the portal venous phase also showed acceptable AUC (0.703-0.748). Thus CE-CT features, especially the enhancement degree at the arterial phases, may be useful for differentiating hypo-PNETs from PDAC using CE-CT.
Zhonglan WangXiao ChenJianhua WangWenjing CuiShuai RenZhongqiu WangZhongqiu WangZhongqiu Wang
Shuai RenXiao ChenJianhua WangRui ZhaoLina SongHui LiZhongqiu Wang
Yajie WangXin ChenJianhua WangWenjing CuiCheng WangXiao ChenZhongqiu Wang
Cheng WangWenjing CuiJianhua WangXiao ChenHe TongZhongqiu Wang