The purpose of this study
was to evaluate the feasibility of a totalliver-
volume perfusion CT (CTP)
technique for the detection and characterization
of livermetastases. Twenty
patients underwent helical CT of the
total liver volume before and 11 times
after intravenous contrast-material
injection. To decrease distortion artifacts,
all phases were co-registered
using 3-D image fusion before creating
blood-flow maps. Lesion-based sensitivity
and specificity for liver metastases
of first the conventional four
phases (unenhanced, arterial, portal
venous, and equilibrium) and later all
12 phases including blood-flow maps
were determined as compared to intraoperative
ultrasound and surgical exploration.
Arterial and portal venous
perfusion was calculated for normalappearing
and metastatic liver tissue.
Total-liver-volume perfusion values
were comparable to studies using
single-level CTP. Compared to fourphase
CT, total -liver-volume CTP
increased sensitivity to 89.2 from
78.4% (P=0.046) and specificity to
82.6 from 78.3% (P=0.074). Total -
liver-volume CTP is a noninvasive,
quantitative, and feasible technique.
Preliminary results suggest an improved
detection of liver metastases for
CTP compared to four-phase CT