Objectives: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the utility of contrast-enhanced sonography as an adjunct to conventional transvaginal sonography for detecting endometrial carcinoma and defining the depth of myometrial invasion.
Methods: A total of 35 patients with endometrial carcinoma diagnosed by endometrial sampling were examined with transvaginal sonography followed by contrast-enhanced sonography before treatment. The contrast enhancement phases (ie, early wash-in/out and late wash-in/out) were visually observed before comparison of tumors grouped by average diameter and histopathologic grade. We evaluated the effectiveness of contrast-enhanced sonography as an adjunct to transvaginal sonography in tumor imaging. We calculated the accuracy of contrast-enhanced sonography for diagnosing the depth of tumor invasion into the myometrium by using arcuate vascular plexus involvement as the sonographic standard for diagnosis of deep myometrial infiltration.
Results: Of the 34 tumors identified by contrast-enhanced sonography, 28 (82.4%) showed early wash-in, and 6 (17.6%) showed late wash-in. Similar numbers of cases showed early and late wash-out. The enhancement phases did not differ significantly across groups with different average tumor diameters or histologic grades (P > .05). Contrast-enhanced sonography contributed the most to tumor imaging in patients with a thin endometrium after endometrial biopsy because it enhanced the contrast between the tumor and tissue. The diagnostic accuracy of contrast-enhanced sonography for determining the myometrium infiltration depth was 85.3%.
Conclusions: This study revealed diagnostically useful characteristics of the enhancement phase of endometrial carcinoma. The ability to enhance tumor-to-tissue contrast makes contrast-enhanced sonography a valuable adjunct to conventional sonography of endometrial carcinoma, especially for the thin endometrium found after endometrial biopsy. Contrast-enhanced sonography performed well in the diagnosis of the myometrial infiltration depth when using arcuate vascular plexus involvement as a marker of deep myometrial infiltration.