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  • Title: The vascular groove sign: a new CT finding associated with osteoid osteomas.
    Author: Liu PT, Kujak JL, Roberts CC, de Chadarevian JP.
    Journal: AJR Am J Roentgenol; 2011 Jan; 196(1):168-73. PubMed ID: 21178063.
    Abstract:
    OBJECTIVE: We have observed that osteoid osteomas are frequently surrounded by thin curvilinear or serpiginous low-density grooves in the surrounding bone on CT examinations. We believe that these grooves represent prominent enlarged feeding arterioles, corresponding to recently published histologic findings. This study was performed to assess the sensitivity and specificity of this vascular groove sign for differentiating osteoid osteomas from other radiolucent bone lesions. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The study group consisted of 42 patients with pathologically proven osteoid osteomas. The control group included 29 patients with radiolucent bone lesions other than osteoid osteomas. Two readers scored CT examinations of these lesions for the presence of the vascular groove sign, defined as one or more radiolucent linear or serpiginous grooves extending from the periosteal surface of bone down to the radiolucent tumor. Sensitivity and specificity values were calculated for each reader. Positive and negative predictive values, p values, and interobserver agreement values were calculated. RESULTS: The sensitivity of the vascular groove sign for detection of osteoid osteoma was 73.8% for reader 1 and 76.2% for reader 2, specificity was 96.6% for reader 1 and 89.7% for reader 2, positive predictive value was 96.9% for reader 1 and 91.4% for reader 2, and negative predictive value was 71.8% for reader 1 and 72.2% for reader 2. The p value was less than 0.0001 for both readers. The interobserver agreement was very good, with a kappa value of 0.85. CONCLUSION: The vascular groove sign is a moderately sensitive but highly specific sign for distinguishing osteoid osteomas from other radiolucent bone tumors on CT.
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