Intermodality concordance of O-RADS US and MRI in patients with adnexal-ovarian lesions at St. Paul's Hospital Millennium Medical College, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
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Abstract
Abstract
Background: Ovarian cancer is a common and complex disease affecting predominantly
postmenopausal women worldwide. Early disease is characterized by asymptomatic or non
specific symptoms; therefore, imaging plays a crucial role in accurate discrimination of
benign vs. malignant adnexal masses, thereby early detection of ovarian cancer. For this US
and MRI evaluation, the major imaging modalities with ORADS-US and MRI, which are
widely accepted lexicons for accurate characterization of ovarian-adnexal lesions.
Objective: To examine the intermodality concordance of O-RADS US and MRI among
patients presenting with adnexal-ovarian lesions at St. Paul's Hospital Millennium Medical
College, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
Methods: An institutional based retrospective cross sectional study of patients record review
was conducted at selected hospital in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. Data were entered and analyzed
using Statistical Package for Social Science (SPSS) version 26. Descriptive analysis was used
to generate frequencies, mean and standard deviations for background characteristics. Percent
agreement and Cohen’s Kappa statistic were used to quantify the level of inter-modality
agreement. Additionally, Pearson's chi square test and two-tailed point-biserial correlation
coefficient (ρ) were used to evaluate the association of potential factors with inter-modality
agreement.
Results: A total of 225 women with adnexal masses were included in this study, with a
subset of 60 women having both US and MRI. Overall, the median age was 37, with an
interquartile range of 29 to 47 years. The agreement between the two approaches for
assigning a specific risk group was substantial (к = 0.67 with a percentage of agreement of
75% and weighted к = 0.79 with a percentage agreement of 91.7%). No statistically
significant association of menopausal status (χ2 = 0.043; p = 0.836) and lesion size (ρ =1.30;
p=0.320) with inter-modality agreement was observed.
Conclusion: US and MRI had substantial concordance for assigning a specific risk group,
with minimal disagreement. While this finding deserves further research, ultrasonographic
studies may offer a reasonable diagnostic alternative when the administration of MRI is not
possible.
Keywords: adnexal mass; ultrasound; MRI; concordance; O-RADS