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High-resolution MR imaging of stage I cervical neoplasia with a dedicated transvaginal coil: MR features and correlation of imaging and pathologic findings.

OBJECTIVE: The purposes of this study were to assess the appearance of stage 1 neoplasia of the cervix by high-resolution MR imaging with an enveloping transvaginal receiver coil and to correlate the imaging findings with the pathologic findings.

SUBJECTS AND METHODS: Fifteen patients (25-73 years old; mean, 40 years old) with clinical stage I disease were examined with a 37-mm-diameter ring-design solenoid receiver coil placed around the cervix. Axial 2.5-mm contiguous slices were obtained with a field of view of 10-15 cm on a 1.0-T HPQ Vista scanner with T1-weighted (660/20 msec [TR/TE]) and T2- weighted (2500/80 msec) spin-echo sequences and dynamic gradient-echo sequences during injection of gadopentetate dimeglumine (0.1 mmol/kg). Ten patients subsequently underwent Wertheim's hysterectomy, two underwent radiotherapy, two underwent extended cone biopsy for microinvasive disease, and one underwent a punch biopsy. For seven of 10 patients who had a hysterectomy, the widths of the tumor and the residual stroma were measured at eight radial points on the transverse images and at corresponding points on the histologic specimens at 5, 10, 15, 20, and 25 mm from the ectocervix. We then compared the widths of the tumor and the stroma on images and histologic specimens at each of these 40 points. Tumor volumes were calculated from the MR imaging and pathologic data and compared. For the other three patients, detailed MR imaging-pathology correlation was not possible because of multifocal tumor distribution (two patients) and insufficient detailed pathologic data (one patient).

RESULTS: Three carcinoma types were recognized. Squamous carcinoma (nine cases) was seen as a centrally expanding intermediate-signal-intensity mass, whereas oat (small)-cell carcinoma (one case) and clear-cell carcinoma (one case) showed a multifocal distribution. For patients who had a radical hysterectomy, we noted good agreement between the widths of the tumor and the stroma determined by MR imaging and histology. Tumor volumes were determined to be 0-28.2 cm3 by MR imaging and 0-18.4 cm3 by pathology. We observed tumor extension into the immediate parametrium in four patients by MR imaging; one of these cases was not confirmed at surgery. Parametrial extension was not underestimated by MR imaging in any case.

CONCLUSION: High-resolution imaging of the cervix with a transvaginal coil provides accurate assessment of the intra- and extracervical extents of tumors in clinical stage 1 cervical neoplasia.

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