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Title: Improving specificity of computed tomography in diagnosis of malignant mediastinal lymph nodes. Author: Feigin DS, Friedman PJ, Liston SE, Haghighi P, Peters RM, Hill JG. Journal: J Comput Tomogr; 1985 Jan; 9(1):21-32. PubMed ID: 3971734. Abstract: Four parameters of lymph node appearance on computed tomography were studied to improve specificity for malignancy in bronchogenic carcinoma: 1) node location, 2) homogeneity, 3) border definition, and 4) delineation by fat. Of 54 carcinoma patients, nodes were pathologically malignant in 21. Computed tomography showed enlarged nodes (over 1 cm) in 20 of these (true-positive rate, 96%), but also in 13 of the 33 patients with pathologically benign lymph nodes (false-positive rate, 39%). A combination of all four computed tomography parameters reduced the false-positive rate from 39 to 21% and decreased the true-positive rate from 96 to 86%. The criterion of border definition alone reduced the false-positive rate from 39 to 6%, but decreased the true-positive rate from 96 to 61%. The most useful computed tomography parameter was delineation, which reduced the false-positive rate to 15% and decreased the true-positive rate only to 86%. The computed tomography appearance of enlarged lymph nodes may be used to improve selection of patients with enlarged nodes for preoperative biopsy.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]