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Japanese Journal of Clinical Oncology Advance Access originally published online on June 23, 2005
Japanese Journal of Clinical Oncology 2005 35(7):386-390; doi:10.1093/jjco/hyi109
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© 2005 Foundation for Promotion of Cancer Research

A New, Accurate and Conventional Five-point Method for Quantitative Evaluation of Ascites Using Plain Computed Tomography in Cancer Patients

Noboru Oriuchi1, Takahito Nakajima1, Erito Mochiki2, Izumi Takeyoshi3, Tatsuya Kanuma4, Keigo Endo1 and Junichi Sakamoto5

1 Department of Diagnostic Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, 2 Department of General Surgical Science, 3 Department of Clinical and Academic Surgery and 4 Department of Reproductive Health and Regeneration, Gunma University Graduate School of Medicine, Maebashi and 5 Department of Epidemiological and Clinical Research Information Management, Kyoto University Graduate School of Medicine, Kyoto, Japan

For reprints and all correspondence: Noboru Oriuchi, Department of Diagnostic Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, Gunma University Graduate School of Medicine, 3-39-22 Showa-machi, Maebashi 371-8511, Japan. E-mail: oriuchi{at}showa.gunma-u.ac.jp

Received February 7, 2005; accepted May 15, 2005

Background: To assess the exact response of the malignant ascites to the treatment, the objective measurement of the volume of ascites is essential. We have developed a simple method to measure the volume of ascites by using standard abdomino-pelvic computed tomography (CT). The aim of the study is to validate the accuracy of the measurements by comparing them with the standard volume calculation by using 3D-CT.

Methods: Twelve consecutive patients with cancer who had measurable ascites underwent 15 helical CT examinations. On conventional CT images, the thickness of ascites in centimeters was measured in three planes such as the bilateral subphrenic space (A and B), the bilateral paracolic space (C and D) and the pre-bladder space (E), and the average thickness: (A + B + C + D + E)/5 was then multiplied by the area of standard abdominal cavity in the anterior projection, that was assumed to be 1000 cm2, to yield the volume of ascites: (A + B + C + D + E) x 200 (ml). The volume of ascites was compared with the exact volume, that was obtained from 3D-CT with the volume rendering method.

Results: The volume of ascites measured by the present method and the volume rendering method ranged from 140 to 4040 ml and from 86 to 4279 ml, respectively. The correlation was statistically significant with a correlation coefficient of 0.956 (P < 0.01) using the Spearman's rank correlation. In 13 examinations with the exact volume ≥300 ml, the average ratio of the absolute difference in the volume was 12.9 ± 13.9% as compared with 62.8 and 162.0% in two examinations with the exact volume <300 ml.

Conclusion: The preliminary study indicated that the present five-point method using a conventional CT was accurate in patients with the volume of ascites ≥300 ml. Because this procedure is simple and easy to perform, it should be feasible in many hospitals for the follow-up of ascites after treatment.

Key Words: ascites • computed tomography • volume rendering method


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