Copyright
©The Author(s) 2016.
World J Radiol. Feb 28, 2016; 8(2): 148-158
Published online Feb 28, 2016. doi: 10.4329/wjr.v8.i2.148
Published online Feb 28, 2016. doi: 10.4329/wjr.v8.i2.148
Ref. | Journal, yr | Variables | Main results | Highlights |
Lederle et al[31] | J Vasc Surg, 1995 | US, CTaxial | US smaller than CTaxial an average of 0.27 cm | Difference < 0.2 cm in 44% and > 0.5 cm in 33% of patients |
Jaakkola et al[23] | Eur J Vasc Endovasc Surg, 1996 | US, CTaxial | Mean AAA anteroposterior CTaxial-US difference was 2.6 ± 3.9 mm. Mean transverse difference was 0.8 ± 4.4 | Interobsever differences < 5 mm in 84% of the US and 91% of the CTaxial recordings |
Wanhainen et al[32] | Eur J Vasc Endovasc Surg, 2002 | US, CTaxial | In AAAs the mean diameter did not differ significantly | 95% of differences between US and CTaxial are expected to be < 8.0 mm in anteroposterior and < 10.6 mm in transverse measurements |
Sprouse et al[33] | J Vasc Surg, 2003 | US, CTaxial | CTaxial (5.69 ± 0.89 cm) significantly larger than US (4.74 ± 0.91 cm) | Strong correlation between CTmax and US (r = 0.705), but difference < 1.0 cm in only 51% of cases |
Singh et al[34] | Eur J Vasc Endovasc Surg, 2004 | US, CTaxial | Total: US smaller by -0.11 mm, aortas < 30 mm: US smaller by -0.64 mm, aortas 30-39 mm: CT smaller by 0.67 mm, aortas > 40 mm: CT smaller 1.09 mm | Differences > 5 mm are expected in 8% of patients. Variability increases with increasing diameter |
Sprouse et al[35] | Eur J Vasc Endovasc Surg, 2004 | US, CTaxial CTorth | Mean CTaxial (58.0 mm) significantly larger than USmax (53.9 mm) or CTorth (54.7 mm). Insignificant difference between US and Dorth | When aortic angulation was < 25°, Daxial (55.3 mm), US (54.3 mm), and Dorth (54.1 mm) were similar. When aortic angulation was > 25°, Daxial (60.1 mm) was significantly larger than US (53.8 mm) and Dorth (55.0 mm) |
Manning et al[36] | J Vasc Surg, 2009 | US, CTaxial, CTorth | US smaller than CTaxial by 9.6 mm and CTorth by 7.3 mm | Of all CT recordings, diameter perpendicular to the maximal ellipse on axial sections most closely approximates the findings of US and therefore this most closely approximates criteria used in the UKSAT |
Foo et al[37] | Eur J Vasc Endovasc Surg, 2011 | US, CTorth | US underestimated AAA size compared to CTorth by a mean difference of 0.21 (± 0.39) cm | Limits of agreement were -0.55 to 0.96 cm, exceeding clinical acceptability. 70% of patients with US < 5.5 cm presented CTorth > 5.5 cm |
Kontopodis et al[38] | Eur J Radiol, 2013 | CTaxial, CTorth | CTaxial greater than CT orth by 2 mm (range: 0-12.3 mm) | 20% of the CTs presented Daxial above and Dorth below 5.5 cm which is threshold for repair. Growth rates should be determined with either axial or orthogonal technique not interchanging between methods |
Ref. | Journal, yr | Population | Definition of size-change | Main results |
Wever et al[45] | Eur J Vasc Endovasc Surg, 2000 | Post-EVAR | LOAs | 37%, discordance Dmax and volume measurements. A decrease in aneurysm size was missed using Dmax in 14% of cases and an increase in 19% of cases |
Prinssen et al[46] | Eur J Vasc Endovasc Surg, 2003 | Post-EVAR | NA | Volume data resulted in more "good/wait" while Diameter data resulted in more "not good/further diagnostics"-decisions |
Kritpracha et al[42] | JEVT, 2004 | Post-EVAR | 10% for volume, 5 mm for diameter | Volume changed in 81% of studies (15% increase and 66% decrease). Dmax changed 57% (4% increase and 53% decrease). Among 20 studies with increased volume, Dmax increased in only 5 |
van Keulen et al[43] | J Endovasc Ther, 2009 | Post-EVAR | 5% for volume, 5 mm for diameter | Volumetry detected aneurysm growth in 24% and shrinkage in 54% of patients, which was reflected by Dmax in 10.6% and 28% respectively |
Parr et al[40] | Eur J Radiol, 2011 | Small AAAs | LOAs | 42% of patients who had increased aortic volume did not display corresponding diameter changes |
Kauffmann et al[41] | Eur J Radiol, 2012 | Small AAAs | LOAs | 4/28 (14.3%) patients presented volume increase which was not reflected in Dmax |
Kontopodis et al[44] | Eur J Radiol, 2014 | Small AAAs | LOAs | 18% of patients who had increased aortic volume did not display corresponding diameter changes. AAAs presenting rapid volume increase had a 10-fold risk to be operated, while the risk was 3-fold for rapid Dmax increase |
- Citation: Kontopodis N, Lioudaki S, Pantidis D, Papadopoulos G, Georgakarakos E, Ioannou CV. Advances in determining abdominal aortic aneurysm size and growth. World J Radiol 2016; 8(2): 148-158
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/1949-8470/full/v8/i2/148.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.4329/wjr.v8.i2.148