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UnknownNCT01329458

Contrast Enhanced Ultrasound For The Evaluation Of Focal Liver Lesions

Contrast Enhanced Ultrasound for the Evaluation of Focal Liver Lesions - a Multi-center Study on the Usefulness in the Clinical Practice

Status
Unknown
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
1,500 (estimated)
Sponsor
Societatea Romana de Ultrasonografie in Medicina si Biologie · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The aim of the study is to assess the value of contrast enhanced ultrasound in the evaluation of de novo focal liver lesions in clinical practice, in a prospective multi-center design.

Detailed description

Focal liver lesions (FLL) are quite frequently discovered in daily practice at routine ultrasound and sometimes require the use of extensive investigations for a correct diagnosis, thus increasing the costs and duration of diagnosis. On the other hand, due to screening strategies for patients with liver cirrhosis, FLL are discovered very early in these patients, and they must be evaluated in order to establish a therapeutic strategy (including transplantation, surgical resection or percutaneous echoguided procedures). Contrast enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) using second generation contrast agents is a relatively new imaging modality that allows the characterization of FLL and allows a positive diagnosis based on the vascular pattern of the lesion. The advantages of this method are the low cost as compared with other imaging modalities and the fact that it can be performed immediately after standard abdominal ultrasound, so approximately 5 minutes after CEUS (the total duration of this investigation) a confident diagnosis can be obtained. The place of CEUS in the diagnostic algorithm of FLL is not very well established. The European Federation of Societies for Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology (EFSUMB) issued the first Guidelines regarding the use of CEUS in 2004, revised in 2008, in which the main indications of this method are presented. The purpose of this study is to establish the value of CEUS in the evaluation of de novo FLL in clinical practice. The study will include patients discovered with de novo FLL at standard ultrasound in which the ultrasound study is not conclusive for the positive diagnosis (the patients with simple cysts or known FLL under CEUS follow up will be excluded form the study). The standard ultrasound will be followed by the contrast study using SonoVue® (Bracco, Italy) as contrast agent. The amount of contrast agent will be documented in every patient (it depends on the ultrasound machine used and the suspected diagnosis). The examination will be performed using the dedicated contrast software of each ultrasound machine used in the study. The investigators shall also document in every patient: the indication for CEUS study, a short history including the presence of chronic hepatopathies or malignancies, the ultrasound machine used and the operator. Each examination will last about 5 min after bolus injection and will be documented by 4 video files no longer than 30 seconds each, containing: The standard study, the arterial phase, the portal phase and the late phase. Additional loops can be stored whenever it is considered necessary. A CEUS diagnosis will be established based on the contrast study. This will be compared with the final diagnosis which will be established based on all available imaging and clinical data: computer tomography, MRI, biopsy, follow up information. A CEUS examination will be considered conclusive if, following contrast, the FLL had a typical enhancement pattern according to the EFSUMB guidelines, and inconclusive if the enhancement pattern of the lesions was not in concordance with this guide. The stored loops will be also revised by different operators. The study design is prospective, multi-center and will be approved by the ethical review board.

Conditions

Timeline

Start date
2010-12-01
Primary completion
2011-12-01
Completion
2011-12-01
First posted
2011-04-06
Last updated
2011-04-06

Locations

5 sites across 1 country: Romania

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01329458. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.