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DOI:10.2214/AJR.05.1643
AJR 2007; 189:W1-W3
© American Roentgen Ray Society


Case Report

Malignant Rectal Polyp Overlooked on CT Colonography Because of Retention Balloon: Opposing Crescent Appearance as Sign of Compressed Polyp

Eugene K. Choi1,2, Seong Ho Park1, Dae Yoon Kim1 and Hyun Kwon Ha1

1 Department of Radiology and Research Institute of Radiology, University of Ulsan College of Medicine, Asan Medical Center, 388-1 Poongnap-Dong, Songpa-Gu, 138-040 Seoul, Korea.
2 Present address: Weill Medical College of Cornell University, New York, NY.

Received September 15, 2005; accepted after revision November 3, 2005.

 
Address correspondence to S. H. Park (seongho{at}amc.seoul.kr).

WEB

This is a Web exclusive article.

Keywords: colon cancer • colon cancer screening • colonography • CT colonography • false-negative • rectal polyp


Introduction
Top
Introduction
Case Report
Discussion
References
 
Obscuration of rectal lesions by a rectal catheter or by its retention balloon is a well-established diagnostic pitfall at barium enema examination that often requires deflation of the balloon or removal of the catheter to obtain an unobscured view [1]. Rectal lesions missed at CT colonography (CTC), on the other hand, are rare because of the relatively small size of the rectal catheter, the proclivity of the rectum for adequate luminal distention, and the fact that a retention balloon is not needed in most patients [2]. Although a retention balloon is not necessarily required for CTC, it may be helpful for optimal colonic distention in a select group of patients with insufficient anal sphincteric tone. Its use, however, may pose another potential source of false-negative results. A distended retention balloon may compress a rectal polyp against the wall of the rectum, thereby altering the gross morphology of the lesion and allowing the polyp to escape detection on CTC review.

To our knowledge, the occurrence of a rectal polyp being compressed by a retention balloon or of a rectal polyp being compressed to the degree that was seen in our patient has not been reported. We report a case whereby a 12-mm polypoid rectal adenocarcinoma arising in a tubular adenoma was missed both prospectively and retrospectively at CTC performed using an inflated retention balloon. We also suggest a finding at CTC that may help correctly identify a retention balloon–induced compressed polyp.


Case Report
Top
Introduction
Case Report
Discussion
References
 
A 57-year-old asymptomatic man was referred to our institution for abdominal screening including CTC, which consists of CTC for colon cancer screening and contrast-enhanced scanning of the abdomen for assessment of other abdominal organs. Bowel-cleansing preparation began 1 day before the examination: The patient ingested three doses of 200 mL of 5% barium sulfate suspension and 20 mL of sodium amidotrizoate and meglumine amidotrizoate (Gastrografin, Schering), each of which was taken immediately after a meal, and 4 L of polyethylene glycol solution.

A reduced-size catheter of 6.7 mm in diameter (PROTOCO2L administration set, E-Z-EM) was placed in the patient's rectum by a dedicated CT technologist. After inflation of a retention cuff, it was gently pulled back until its proximal end rested on the anal sphincter. The primary criterion for retention balloon usage in our institution is low sphincteric tone that causes air leakage and consequently prevents adequate distention of the colon.

Carbon dioxide infused through the rectal catheter by an automatic colon insufflator (PROTOCO2L colon insufflator, E-Z-EM) was used to distend the patient's colon. Supine and prone CT scans were obtained using a 16-MDCT scanner (Somatom Sensation 16, Siemens Medical Solutions) with the following parameter settings: beam collimation, 16 x 0.75 mm; slice thickness, 1 mm; reconstruction interval, 0.7 mm; beam pitch,1; gantry rotation time, 0.5 second; table speed, 24 mm/s; field of view, to fit; 120 kV; and 50–100 mAs. The mAs setting depended on anatomic locations—that is, an automatic dose-reduction system (CARE Dose 4D, Siemens) was used. Scanning was performed after IV injection of 150 mL of iopromide (Ultravist 370, Schering) at a rate of 2.7 mL/s through a 20-gauge angiographic catheter inserted in an antecubital vein.

The CT images were reviewed on a CTC system (syngo Colonography, Siemens) by an experienced gastrointestinal radiologist (> 200 cases with colonoscopic correlation). When prospective review was performed with primary 2D views, no colonic lesion was found. As per patient request, colonoscopy was also performed the same day, and a 12-mm sessile polyp was found in the distal rectum (Fig. 1A). However, retrospective review of CTC with both 2D and 3D fly-through methods revealed no apparent lesion.


Figure 1
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Fig. 1A 57-year-old man referred for routine colorectal cancer screening. Colonoscopy image shows 12-mm sessile polyp with surface lobulations in distal rectum.

 


Figure 2
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Fig. 1B 57-year-old man referred for routine colorectal cancer screening. Repeat CT without retention balloon. Transverse image obtained using standard colon window settings (width, 1,500 H; level, –200 H) shows obvious 12-mm polyp (arrow) on anterior wall of distal rectum adjacent to rectal catheter.

 


Figure 3
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Fig. 1C 57-year-old man referred for routine colorectal cancer screening. Repeat CT without retention balloon. Three-dimensional endoluminal CT colonography (CTC) image shows sessile polyp (arrow) adjacent to rectal catheter (arrowheads) in rectum; polyp has same appearance here as on colonoscopy.

 


Figure 4
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Fig. 1D 57-year-old man referred for routine colorectal cancer screening. Initial CT with retention balloon. Transverse image obtained using standard colon window settings (D) (width, 1,500 H; level, –200 H) and transverse image obtained using intermediate soft-tissue window settings (E) (width, 400 H; level, 20 H) of CTC show plaque-shaped structure (arrow, E) on anterior wall of distal rectum that is significantly compressed sessile polyp. Interface between compressed polyp and adjacent wall is noted as shallow notches on each side of polyp (arrowheads, D).

 


Figure 5
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Fig. 1E 57-year-old man referred for routine colorectal cancer screening. Initial CT with retention balloon. Transverse image obtained using standard colon window settings (D) (width, 1,500 H; level, –200 H) and transverse image obtained using intermediate soft-tissue window settings (E) (width, 400 H; level, 20 H) of CTC show plaque-shaped structure (arrow, E) on anterior wall of distal rectum that is significantly compressed sessile polyp. Interface between compressed polyp and adjacent wall is noted as shallow notches on each side of polyp (arrowheads, D).

 


Figure 6
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Fig. 1F 57-year-old man referred for routine colorectal cancer screening. Initial CT with retention balloon. Three-dimensional endoluminal view shows interface between compressed polyp and adjacent colonic wall as pair of opposing, crescentlike depressed structures (arrowheads).

 
Repeated scanning covering only the rectum with the patient in the supine position (given the location of the polyp in the anterior wall on colonoscopy) was performed without IV contrast material and without a retention balloon. The results of the second scan showed a 12-mm sessile polyp protruding into the lumen in the anterior wall of the distal rectum (Figs. 1B and 1C). A measurement obtained from reformatted sagittal images indicated that the distance of the polyp from the anal verge was 5 cm.

A second retrospective review of the corresponding region on the initial scan revealed what appeared to be on 2D view a significantly compressed lesion bordered by two shallow notches (Figs. 1D and 1E). The interface between the compressed polyp and adjacent colonic wall is shown on 3D endoluminal view as a pair of opposing, crescentlike depressed structures (Fig. 1F). The polyp was surgically removed, and subsequent pathologic analysis revealed a well-differentiated rectal adenocarcinoma in the background of tubular adenoma.


Discussion
Top
Introduction
Case Report
Discussion
References
 
CTC is gaining acceptance as a viable option for colon cancer screening. A large study showed that the detection rate of CTC for clinically significant colonic lesions was comparable to that of colonoscopy in an average-risk screening population [3], although concerns about performance raised by heterogeneity of reported sensitivities have not yet been resolved [4]. Inadequate bowel preparation or distention, flat morphology of polyps, and small size of polyps have been documented as major sources of false-negative results at CTC [5].

Although the rectum is generally well evaluated at CTC, in one reported case [2], obscuration of a 10-mm rectal tubulovillous adenoma was attributed to advanced placement of the rectal catheter, resulting in a rectal lesion being missed on prospective review. Our case clearly shows a diagnostic pitfall caused by an inflated retention balloon that if overlooked may result, in the worst-case scenario, in a missed diagnosis of significant rectal malignancy. We hasten to point out that even large polyps can be flattened by a retention balloon to a degree that allows them to escape CTC surveillance in prospective and even in retrospective evaluations.

On the first retrospective view, we had difficulty reconciling the large polyp viewed on colonoscopy with the subtle findings noted on 2D views and the crescent structures on 3D views; both findings were dismissed as mere artifact and thus were not correlated to each other. At the time, we could not have imagined how a polyp of such considerable size could have been flattened to the degree of virtual obliteration on both 2D and 3D endoluminal views. Only on closer analysis of the lesion with correlation to the result of the repeat CT on second retrospective review were we able to determine that the two opposing crescent-shaped concave structures at 3D endoluminal view were characteristic, probably specific, CTC features of polyps being compressed by a retention balloon. Although experience with more cases is necessary before making any generalizations, logic dictates that such a pattern is highly suggestive of a rectal polyp being compressed by a retention balloon. Although the two shallow notches bordering the lesion on the 2D view can also signal the presence of a balloon-compressed polyp, we believe that the appearance of the opposing crescent visualized only on the 3D view is a more recognizable and overt representation than the subtle findings on 2D views. Therefore, primary 3D review may be more appropriate than 2D review for evaluating the balloon-compressed portion of the rectum.

Given that the distal rectum is a relative blind spot for colonoscopy [6], accurate CTC examination of the rectum is imperative. Although CTC does not necessarily require a retention balloon, its use seems inevitable in select patients with low anal sphincteric tone or low tolerance for the colonic insufflation. Appropriate reassurance of and instructions to patients may help in performing CTC successfully without a retention balloon. When circumstances require their use, however, careful evaluation of the balloon-dilated segment using the 3D endoluminal view for the presence of the previously described opposing, crescentlike depressed structures may assist in detecting balloon-compressed rectal lesions. Alternatively, scanning the rectum with the balloon deflated in at least one position—preferably with the patient in the prone position to allow air trapping in the rectum—may be necessary.

In conclusion, an inflated rectal balloon can compress and deform an overlying rectal polyp that is significantly large to the point of nearly complete concealment. In cases in which a rectal balloon is required for adequate colonic distention, meticulous survey of the balloon-compressed region for the characteristic sign of a polyp being compressed on 3D endoluminal view may help prevent false-negative results.


References
Top
Introduction
Case Report
Discussion
References
 

  1. Thoeni RF, Petras A. Detection of rectal and rectosigmoid lesions by double-contrast barium enema examination and sigmoidoscopy: accuracy of technique and efficacy of standard overhead views. Radiology 1982;142 : 59-62[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  2. Pickhardt PJ, Choi JR. Adenomatous polyp obscured by small-caliber rectal catheter at low-dose CT colonography: a rare diagnostic pitfall. AJR 2005; 184:1581 -1583[Free Full Text]
  3. Pickhardt PJ, Choi JR, Hwang I, et al. Computed tomographic virtual colonoscopy to screen for colorectal neoplasia in asymptomatic adults. N Engl J Med 2003;349 : 2191-2200[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  4. Mulhall BP, Veerappan GR, Jackson JL. Meta-analysis: computed tomographic colonography. Ann Intern Med2005; 142:635 -650[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  5. Park SH, Ha HK, Kim MJ, et al. False-negative results at multi-detector row CT colonography: multivariate analysis of causes for missed lesions. Radiology 2005;235 : 495-502[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  6. Pickhardt PJ, Nugent PA, Mysliwiec PA, Choi JR, Schindler WR. Location of adenomas missed by optical colonoscopy. Ann Intern Med 2004; 141:352 -359[Abstract/Free Full Text]

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