News Release

Dual-energy CT metrics for differentiating adrenal adenomas

For adrenal lesions evaluated by single-phase dual-energy CT (DECT), fat fraction had higher sensitivity than virtual noncontrast attenuation at both the clinically optimal threshold and at the traditional ≤10 HU threshold.

Peer-Reviewed Publication

American Roentgen Ray Society

58-year-old patient with right lower quadrant pain, who underwent abdominopelvic CT using dual-energy system

image: Left to right: Axial conventional portal-venous phase postcontrast image, iodine overlay image, virtual noncontrast attenuation image, and fat-fraction map show left adrenal mass (arrow). Based on mean values of two readers, mass has conventional portal-venous phase attenuation of 68.9 HU, virtual noncontrast attenuation of 15.7 HU, fat fraction of 26.2%, iodine density of 2.2 mg/mL, normalized iodine density of 0.42, ratio of normalized iodine density to virtual noncontrast attenuation of 0.027, and relative enhancement ratio of 339%. Mass was diagnosed as adenoma based on two criteria applied in present investigation, assessed using noncontrast CT performed 7 years earlier (attenuation ≤10 HU on noncontrast images, and >1-year size stability). view more 

Credit: ARRS/AJR

Leesburg, VA, December 1, 2022According to an open-access Editor’s Choice accepted manuscript published in ARRS’ American Journal of Roentgenology (AJR), for adrenal lesions evaluated by single-phase dual-energy CT (DECT), fat fraction had higher sensitivity than virtual noncontrast attenuation at both the clinically optimal threshold and at the traditional ≤10 HU threshold.

“DECT-based three-material decomposition algorithms can help definitively characterize adrenal lesions detected on routine abdominal imaging as adenomas, thereby reducing downstream follow-up testing,” wrote first author Anne-Sophie T. Loonis, MD from Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, MA.

In this AJR accepted manuscript, 128 patients (82 women, 46 men; mean age, 64 years) who underwent portal-venous phase abdominopelvic CT between January 2016 and December 2019 showed a total of 139 adrenal lesions with a reference standard based on imaging, clinical, and pathologic records: 87 adenomas, 52 nonadenomas (48 metastases, 2 adrenal cortical carcinomas, 1 ganglioneuroma, 1 hematoma). Two radiologists located ROIs to determine virtual noncontrast attenuation, fat fraction, iodine density normalized to portal vein, and relative enhancement ratio—for masses with virtual noncontrast attenuation >10 HU.

Ultimately, for adrenal masses assessed by single-phase portal-venous phase DECT, when maintaining 100% specificity, sensitivity for adenoma was significantly higher for fat fraction [59% (95% CI: 48-69%)] than for virtual noncontrast attenuation at clinically optimal threshold [39% (95% CI: 29-50%)] or at traditional ≤10 HU threshold [28% (95% CI:19-38%)].

“The use of DECT-derived metrics to definitively diagnose incidental adrenal lesions as adenomas could help avoid the costs, radiation exposure, contrast media exposure, and patient anxiety associated with downstream imaging that may otherwise be performed for further lesion characterization,” the authors of this AJR accepted manuscript clarified.

An electronic supplement to this AJR accepted manuscript is available here.


North America’s first radiological society, the American Roentgen Ray Society (ARRS) remains dedicated to the advancement of medicine through the profession of medical imaging and its allied sciences. An international forum for progress in radiology since the discovery of the x-ray, ARRS maintains its mission of improving health through a community committed to advancing knowledge and skills with the world’s longest continuously published radiology journal—American Journal of Roentgenology—the ARRS Annual Meeting, InPractice magazine, topical symposia, myriad multimedia educational materials, as well as awarding scholarships via The Roentgen Fund®.

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