Objective . We evaluate if axial-based lymph node size criteria can be applied to coronal and sagittal planes. Methods . Fifty pretreatment computed tomographic (CT) neck exams were evaluated in patients with head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (SCCa) and neck lymphadenopathy. Axial-based size criteria were applied to all 3 imaging planes, measured, and classified as “enlarged” if equal to or exceeding size criteria. Results . 222 lymph nodes were “enlarged” in one imaging plane; however, 53.2% (118/222) of these were “enlarged” in all 3 planes. Classification concordance between axial versus coronal/sagittal planes was poor (kappa = −0.09 and −0.07, resp., P < 0.05 ). The McNemar test showed systematic misclassification when comparing axial versus coronal ( P < 0.001 ) and axial versus sagittal ( P < 0.001 ) planes. Conclusion . Classification of “enlarged” lymph nodes differs between axial versus coronal/sagittal imaging planes when axial-based nodal size criteria are applied independently to all three imaging planes, and exclusively used without other morphologic nodal data.
CITATION STYLE
Bartlett, E. S., Walters, T. D., & Yu, E. (2013). Can Axial-Based Nodal Size Criteria Be Used in Other Imaging Planes to Accurately Determine “Enlarged” Head and Neck Lymph Nodes? ISRN Otolaryngology, 2013, 1–7. https://doi.org/10.1155/2013/232968
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