Magnetic resonance in the evaluation of parametrial involvement in carcinoma of the cervix uteri

1991 
: Cervical carcinoma is one of the most frequent gynecologic malignancies. Its prognosis depends on both tumor volume at diagnosis and its stage. Staging accuracy is important not only for prognosis but also for optimal treatment planning. According to FIGO criteria, carcinomas without parametrial involvement (stage I and limited stage IIA disease) can be surgically treated. For more advanced stages, treatment, in most cases, consists of radiation therapy or chemotherapy alone. The authors evaluated MR accuracy in the diagnosis of parametrial involvement; to this purpose, 32 patients with histologically proven lesions were referred for MR imaging, which was performed with a 0.5 T superconductive magnet. Transverse and sagittal SE images were obtained with T2 weighting (TR 1800 ms, TE 30-100 ms); transverse and sometimes sagittal images were obtained with T1 weighting (TR 450/300 ms, TE 20/30). T1-weighted images distinguished neoplasm from cervical stroma or dense parametrial connective tissue in 40% of cases only. T2-weighted images, instead, demonstrated the difference in all cases, showing tumor as a hyperintense area in 90% of patients. Neoplastic involvement of pericervical connective tissue was diagnosed, with those sequences, on the basis of focal disruptions of the outer hypointense fibrous cervical stroma; findings were correlated with those from a previous clinical staging and in 26/32 patients with pathologic findings. MR accuracy in demonstrating parametrial involvement was 88%, sensitivity was 77% and specificity was 94%. Clinical staging accuracy in the evaluation of this parameter was 66%. In 6 cases with no surgical findings, MR confirmed extensive parametrial and vesical or rectal neoplastic involvement, as diagnosed at clinics. MR imaging, thanks to its multiplanar and multiparametric imaging capabilities is a very reliable technique in the preoperative staging of cervical carcinoma. Moreover, since clinical staging can sometimes underestimate pericervical connective spread, the higher accuracy of MR imaging can help avoid useless interventional procedures.
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