Rationale and objectives: The authors evaluated the ability of observers to identify simulated nodules placed electronically on normal contrast material-enhanced computed tomography (CT) scans of the liver to assess the effect of nodule size and polarity on detection and localization.
Methods: Seven readers evaluated two sets of CT scans that contained 80 stimuli each. The simulated nodules were either darker or brighter than the contrast-enhanced liver and were 5.6-8.0 mm in diameter. Readers were asked to find the most suspicious-looking nodule on each section and rate the likelihood that the chosen location actually contained a nodule.
Results: The fraction of nodules found by each observer was substantially greater for dark nodules than for bright ones (0.679 +/- 0.03 vs 0.345 +/- 0.045, respectively [mean +/- standard error]). This difference was consistent for all nodule sizes. Additional analyses (including receiver operating characteristic curves of conditional responses) suggested that the presence of bright blood vessels distracted the readers and decreased their ability to find bright nodules.
Conclusion: Normal vascular structures on contrast-enhanced CT scans of the liver impair an observer's ability to detect bright liver nodules.