Dentomaxillofacial Radiology, vol.39, no.6, pp.349-355, 2010 (SCI-Expanded)
Objectives: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the accuracy of MRI combined with diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) vs fine-needle aspiration cytology (FNAC) in diagnosing common parotid masses. Methods: 25 consecutive patients (mean age 61 years) with parotid masses were included in this study. Informed consent and ethical approval was obtained. 22 patients underwent both MRI combined with DWI and FNAC. From DWI data, apparent diffusion coefficient maps were generated. The MRI study protocol consisted of T1 weighted spin echo; T2 weighted and T2 weighted fat-suppressed turbo spin echo; DWI; and T1 weighted fat-suppressed postcontrast images. MRI and FNAC diagnoses were compared with histopathology. Youden's index was used to compare the two methods. Results: Masses comprised eight Warthin tumours, eight adenomas (six pleomorphic adenomas, two basal cell adenomas), five carcinomas, two lipomas, one haemagioma and one benign lymphadenopathy. Technically, MRI was successful in 24 of the 25 patients (96%), FNAC was successful in 20 of the 23 patients (87.0%). The accuracy, sensitivity and specificity of MRI without DWI were 96%, 80% and 100%, respectively. Diagnostic accuracy did not increase by adding DWI to conventional MRI; however, DWI was helpful for diagnosing benign tumour histology. MRI combined with DWI was successful for determining accurate tumour typing in all benign masses except one lymphadenopathy. When FNAC had adequate material the accuracy, sensitivity and specificity were 95%, 75% and 100%, respectively. Youden's index was 0.80 for MRI and 0.75 for FNAC. Conclusions: MRI combined with DWI seems to have similar diagnostic potential as FNAC in differentiation of benign vs malignant parotid masses. © 2010 The British Institute of Radiology.