Investigator

Pek-Lan Khong

National University of Singapore

About

PKPek-Lan Khong
Papers(1)
Diffusion-weighted ma…
Collaborators(8)
Elaine Yuen Phin LeeEsther Man Fung WongHerbert PangJose AU PeruchoKa Yu TseKeith WH ChiuLawrence Wing Chi ChanMandy Man Yee Chu
Institutions(4)
Queen Mary HospitalPamela Youde Netherso…University Of Hong Ko…Hong Kong Polytechnic…

Papers

Diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging of primary cervical cancer in the detection of sub-centimetre metastatic lymph nodes

Abstract Background Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has limited accuracy in detecting pelvic lymph node (PLN) metastasis. This study aimed to examine the use of intravoxel incoherent motion (IVIM) in classifying pelvic lymph node (PLN) involvement in cervical cancer patients. Methods Fifty cervical cancer patients with pre-treatment magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) were examined for PLN involvement by one subspecialist and one non-subspecialist radiologist. PLN status was confirmed by positron emission tomography or histology. The tumours were then segmented by both radiologists. Kruskal-Wallis tests were used to test for differences between diffusion tumour volume (DTV), apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC), pure diffusion coefficient (D), and perfusion fraction (f) in patients with no malignant PLN involvement, those with sub-centimetre and size-significant PLN metastases. These parameters were then considered as classifiers for PLN involvement, and were compared with the accuracies of radiologists. Results Twenty-one patients had PLN involvement of which 10 had sub-centimetre metastatic PLNs. DTV increased (p = 0.013) while ADC (p = 0.015), and f (p = 0.006) decreased as the nodal status progressed from no malignant involvement to sub-centimetre and then size-significant PLN metastases. In determining PLN involvement, a classification model (DTV + f) had similar accuracies (80%) as the non-subspecialist (76%; p = 0.73) and subspecialist (90%; p = 0.31). However, in identifying patients with sub-centimetre PLN metastasis, the model had higher accuracy (90%) than the non-subspecialist (30%; p = 0.01) but had similar accuracy with the subspecialist (90%, p = 1.00). Interobserver variability in tumour delineation did not significantly affect the performance of the classification model. Conclusion IVIM is useful in determining PLN involvement but the added value decreases with reader experience.

7Works
1Papers
8Collaborators

Positions

Researcher

National University of Singapore

Keywords
Adult and Paediatric Oncology and Haematologyin particularapplications of PET-CT and advanced MR imaging modalitiesAnimal MR imaging; translational research in animal modelsGeneral Paediatric Radiologyincluding perinatal and neonatal imagingPaediatric Neuroradiologyin particularapplications of advanced MR imaging modalities including Diffusion-weighted imagingDiffusion tensor imaging and Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy and fMRIRadiological Protection in Medicine
Links & IDs
0000-0002-9280-6778

Scopus: 7006693233

Researcher Id: C-4292-2009