Chronic hepatitis: Correlation of early patchy and late linear enhancement patterns on gadolinium‐enhanced MR images with histopathology initial experience

2001 
The purposes of our study were to describe the early and late enhancement patterns of the liver on gadolinium-enhanced dynamic magnetic resonance (MR) images in patients with chronic hepatitis and to correlate these findings with histopathology. Patients were entered into the study based on the presence of chronic hepatitis, imaging evaluation with MR imaging (MRI), including early and late postgadolinium images, and histopathologic correlation. Early and late dynamic postgadolinium MR images of 29 consecutive patients with a pathologically proven diagnosis of chronic hepatitis were retrospectively evaluated for the presence of three types of enhancement, i.e., homogeneous, linear, and patchy. Correlation was made between the enhancement patterns on MR images and blinded retrospective interpretation of the histopathologic specimens, which were obtained within 3 months of the MR examination. Of the 29 patients, 16 (55.2%) patients showed patchy enhancement on the early gadolinium-enhanced MR images. In 11 (68.8%) of these 16 patients, histopathology demonstrated numerous macrophages, variable hepatocyte necrosis, and increased steatosis. The remaining 13 (44.8%) patients showed homogeneous enhancement on the early gadolinium-enhanced MR images. In 11 (84.6%) of these 13 patients, histopathology demonstrated few or no macrophages, little or no hepatocellular necrosis, and little or no steatosis. The correlation between patchy enhancement and acute liver inflammation was significant (P = 0.005). On the late gadolinium-enhanced MR images, 20 (69.0%) of 29 patients showed prominent linear enhancement. In 19 (95.0%) of these 20 patients, histopathology revealed hepatic fibrosis. We concluded that in patients with chronic hepatitis, the presence of early patchy enhancement indicates either concurrent or recent hepatocellular damage, whereas the presence of late linear enhancement indicates the presence of fibrosis, with a high degree of correlation with histopathologic findings. J. Magn. Reson. Imaging 2001;13:385–391. © 2001 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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