Abstract.
Background: To identify the reasons for misdiagnosis of the degree of stromal invasion by uterine cervical cancer with various magnetic resonance sequences.
Methods: T2-weighted, dynamic, and postcontrast T1-weighted images were obtained in the sagittal plane in 20 patients with uterine cervical cancer. After evaluating these sequences for the degree of stromal invasion, histologic specimens were directly correlated with these images.
Results: The degree of stromal invasion was correctly diagnosed in 15 of the 20 cases on T2-weighted images, in 12 on dynamic images, and in eight on postcontrast T1-weighted images. All misdiagnoses were due to overestimation. Histologically, peritumoral stroma showed inflammation or edema in two patients, whereas no histological abnormality was found in the other patients. A hyperintense rim, i.e., a peritumoral enhanced ring-shaped structure, was observed on the enhanced images of five patients. The hyperintense rim corresponded to the periphery of the tumor in three patients and to the cervical stroma in two patients.
Conclusion: T2-weighted images permitted the most accurate evaluation of stromal invasion by uterine tumors. Overdiagnosis may be due to an abnormal intensity of the cervical stroma, which was observed more frequently on dynamic and postcontrast T1-weighted images than on T2-weighted images.
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Received: 10 November 1995/Accepted after revision: 13 March 1996
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Tsuda, K., Murakami, T., Kurachi, H. et al. MR imaging of cervical carcinoma: comparison among T2-weighted, dynamic, and postcontrast T1-weighted images with histopathological correlation . Abdom Imaging 22 , 103 –107 (1997). https://doi.org/10.1007/s002619900151
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s002619900151