Results: One hundred eighteen women (mean age, 56.2 years), representing 4.1% of
the screening cohort, had an indeterminate adnexal
mass (108 unilateral, 10 bilateral; mean size,
4.1 cm) at prospective CT interpretation......No ovarian cancers were prospectively identified, although
four cases of ovarian cancer developed
subsequent to a negative adnexal finding at CT examination during a
15–44-month interval
among the remaining 2751 women.
cont'd
Materials and Methods: This study was institutional
review board approved and HIPAA compliant. Informed consent was waived.
The fate of indeterminate
adnexal lesions identified at unenhanced CT in
2869 consecutive women (mean age, 57.2 years; age range, 50–97 years)
undergoing
colonography screening between April 2004 and
December 2008 was evaluated.
Conclusion:
Incidental indeterminate adnexal lesions
were relatively common at unenhanced CT (4.1%), but subsequent work-up
revealed
no ovarian cancers. Furthermore, a normal
finding at CT was not protective against short-term development of
ovarian cancer.
More sophisticated risk factor assessment is
needed to identify women at higher risk.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Your comments?
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.