Ring enhancement in ultrasmall superparamagnetic iron oxide MR imaging: a potential new sign for characterization of liver lesions.

Abstract
We performed this study to evaluate the incidence and significance of ring enhancement after i.v. administration of an ultrasmall superparamagnetic iron oxide (USPIO) particle (Code 7227), a reticuloendothelial contrast agent with potential use as a blood-pool agent, for characterizing focal hepatic lesions. Conventional T1-weighed imaging, fat-suppressed T1-weighted imaging, conventional T2-weighted imaging, and fast T2-weighted imaging of the liver were obtained in 27 patients with 43 liver lesions before and after i.v. administration of a USPIO preparation. All lesions were larger than 1 cm; 29 were malignant and 14 were benign. Diagnosis was confirmed in all cases, either pathologically (19 patients) or by follow-up examination (eight patients). Two readers independently evaluated each pulse sequence for the presence of ring enhancement of hepatic lesions. Ring enhancement was noted only on T1-weighted images, with no ring enhancement evident on T2-weighted images. Twenty of 43 (47%) lesions showed ring enhancement, including 18 of 29 (62%) malignant lesions and two of 14 (14%) benign lesions (p < .011); Wilcoxon signed rank test). Fat-suppressed T1-weighted imaging showed ring enhancement better than or equal to conventional T1-weighted imaging in all cases, with ring enhancement of 15 of 18 (83%) malignant lesions and two of two benign lesions better demonstrated on fat-suppressed T1-weighted imaging sequences (p < or = .025). Ring enhancement after i.v. administration of Code 7227 is a frequent finding seen more often with malignant than benign lesions, potentially identifying a new MR imaging feature for the characterization of liver lesions. The identification of ring enhancement on T1-weighted images attests to the significant blood-pool effects of USPIO particles.