Radiology - Research Publications

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    Variability of Liver Shear Wave Measurements Using a New Ultrasound Elastographic Technique
    Nadebaum, DP ; Nicoll, AJ ; Sood, S ; Gorelik, A ; Gibson, RN (WILEY, 2018-03)
    OBJECTIVES: A new 2-dimensional (2D) shear wave elastographic (SWE) device has been developed for the noninvasive assessment of liver fibrosis. Guidelines on measurement acquisition parameters are not yet well established for this technique. Our study aimed to assess 2D SWE measurement variability and to determine the number of measurements required per patient to reliably assess liver stiffness. METHODS: Two-dimensional SWE was assessed in 55 patients with mixed-etiology chronic liver disease on an Aplio 500 ultrasound system (Toshiba Medical Systems Corporation, Tochigi, Japan). Ten measurements were obtained per patient by an operator blinded to all preceding readings. Results were analyzed with clinical information obtained from medical records. RESULTS: The median interquartile range/median ratio for 2D SWE was 0.131 (quartiles 1-3, 0.089-0.174). Five readings provided an approximation within 0.11 m/s, or 4.2% of the median velocity of 10 measurements. Factors associated with increased measurement variability included body mass index (ρ = 0.388; P = .01), increased skin-to-liver capsule distance (ρ = 0.426; P = .002), and measurements taken within 1.5 cm of the liver capsule (P < .001). Measurements with heterogeneous shear wave profiles (indicated by a region of interest [ROI] SD/speed ratio > 0.15) showed greater deviation from the set's median velocity than those with an ROI SD/speed ratio of 0.15 or lower (0.42 versus 0.22 m/s; P = .001). CONCLUSIONS: Two-dimensional SWE showed low overall measurement variability, with a minimum of 5 readings providing equivalent precision to the existing method using 10 samples. Obesity, increasing abdominal wall thickness, subcapsular measurements and an ROI SD/speed ratio of greater than 0.15 were all associated with increased measurement variability. The ROI SD/speed ratio warrants further evaluation as a quality assessment metric, to allow objective operator assessment of individual 2D SWE measurement reliability in real time.
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    Acoustic radiation force impulse accuracy and the impact of hepatic steatosis on liver fibrosis staging
    Harris, N ; Nadebaum, D ; Christie, M ; Gorelik, A ; Nicoll, A ; Sood, S ; Gibson, R (WILEY, 2016-10)
    INTRODUCTION: The accuracy of Acoustic Radiation Force Impulse (ARFI) imaging has been validated in the setting of hepatitis C, however, the accuracy in the setting of fatty liver disease (FLD) has been less well-established. The aim of this study was to assess the accuracy of ARFI in the setting of hepatic steatosis. METHODS: Patients with biopsy proven or sonographically diagnosed liver steatosis were assessed for ARFI trends including: inter-operator concordance, interquartile range, ARFI failure rate, relationship between ARFI velocity and steatosis severity, and concordance between biopsy and ARFI fibrosis scores. RESULTS: Three hundred and forty-nine patients were assessed (53 'biopsy' cohort and 296 'ultrasound' cohort), with 28 patients having biopsy on the same day as ARFI. Low stages of fibrosis (F0/1) were over-estimated by ARFI in 62% of cases with biopsy correlation (n = 16, P < 0.001), with ARFI offering increased accuracy in regard to higher-stage fibrosis (14/15 cases, 93%). In both the biopsy and ultrasound cohorts the failure rate and median inter-quartile range increased with increasing steatosis, and the inter-operator concordance remained good across all liver steatosis severities. CONCLUSION: In the setting of steatosis, ARFI is very sensitive in detecting, and accurate in diagnosing, higher stages of fibrosis regardless of steatosis severity. It tends to overestimate the fibrosis category in lower stages of fibrosis. The present study does not show conclusively if the presence of steatosis or its severity independently alters ARFI measurements.
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    Skin-Liver Distance and Interquartile Range-Median Ratio as Determinants of Interoperator Concordance in Acoustic Radiation Force Impulse Imaging
    Su, S ; Wang, W ; Nadebaum, D ; Nicoll, A ; Sood, S ; Gorelik, A ; Lai, J ; Gibson, R (WOLTERS KLUWER MEDKNOW PUBLICATIONS, 2019)
    CONTEXT AND AIMS: The accuracy of acoustic radiation force impulse (ARFI) ultrasound compared to liver biopsy is higher when there is concordance between F-scores of two or more operators. We hypothesized that when the first operator interquartile range/median-velocity ratio (IMR) is <0.3 and skin-liver distance (SLD) is <2.5 cm, there is greater interoperator concordance and a second operator is not necessary. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: Two-operator ARFI ultrasound measurements (F-score, SLD, and IMR) were recorded for 927 consecutive patients. Chi-squared testing compared interoperator concordance for SLD <2.5 cm versus SLD ≥2.5 cm and IMR <0.3 versus IMR ≥0.3 when SLD <2.5 cm, in each of the F-score groups of 0/1, 2, 3, and 4. RESULTS: Statistically significant differences were demonstrated between SLD <2.5 cm and SLD ≥2.5 cm groups for F-scores 0/1 or 4 (P = 0.005) and F-scores 2 or 3 (P < 0.001). Concordance, when SLD measured <2.5 cm, was more than 85% for all F-score groups. In the SLD <2.5 cm group, concordance fell below 85% when IMR ≥0.3, for all F-scores except F2. Specifically, P values comparing IMR <0.3 and IMR ≥0.3 in the various first operator F-score groups were P = 0.040 for F0/F1, P = 0.580 for F2, P = 0.342 for F3, and P < 0.001 for F4. CONCLUSIONS: ARFI measurements from one operator can be considered acceptable when SLD <2.5 cm and IMR <0.3. Otherwise, adding a second operator can improve confidence in the result.