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a Department of
Gastroenterology, Bicêtre Hospital, 94275 Le Kremlin Bicêtre,
France, b Department of Radiology
Correspondence to: Dr F Prat, Service des Maladies du Foie et de l'Appareil Digestif, Bicêtre Hospital, 78 rue du Général Leclerc, 94 275 Le Kremlin Bicêtre, France.
Accepted for publication 6 July 1999
BACKGROUND
Magnetic
resonance cholangiography (MRC) is currently under investigation
for non-invasive biliary tract imaging.
AIM
To compare MRC
with endoscopic retrograde cholangiography (ERC) for pretreatment
evaluation of malignant hilar obstruction.
METHODS
Twenty
patients (11 men, nine women; median age 74 years) referred for
endoscopic palliation of a hilar obstruction were included. The cause
of the hilar obstruction was a cholangiocarcinoma in 15 patients and a
hilar compression in five (one hepatocarcinoma, one metastatic breast
cancer, one metastatic leiomyoblastoma, two metastatic colon
cancers). MRC (T2 turbo spin echo sequences; Siemens Magnetomvision 1.5 T) was performed within 12 hours before ERC, which is considered to be
the ideal imaging technique. Tumour location, extension, and type
according to Bismuth's classification were determined by the
radiologist and endoscopist.
RESULTS
MRC was of
diagnostic quality in all but two patients (90%). At ERC, four
patients (20%) had type I, seven (35%) had type II, seven (35%) had
type III, and two (10%) had type IV strictures. MRC correctly
classified 14/18 (78%) patients and underestimated tumour extension in
four (22%). Successful endoscopic biliary drainage was achieved in
11/17 attempted stentings (65%), one of which was a combined procedure
(endoscopic + percutaneous). One patient had a percutaneous external
drain, one had a surgical bypass, and in a third a curative resection
was attempted. Effective drainage was not achieved in six patients
(30%). If management options had been based only on MRC, treatment
choices would have been modified in a more appropriate way in 5/18
(28%) patients with satisfactory MRC.
CONCLUSION
MRC should
be considered for planning treatment of malignant hilar strictures.
Accurate depiction of high grade strictures for which endoscopic
drainage is not the option of choice can preclude unnecessary invasive imaging.
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