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Copyright ©2007 Baishideng Publishing Group Co.
World J Gastroenterol. Aug 14, 2007; 13(30): 4141-4146
Published online Aug 14, 2007. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v13.i30.4141
Table 1 Definitions used for staging rectal cancer
Histopathologic examinationMRI
pT1: Tumor invades the submucosaMRT1: Tumor signal intensity is confined to the submucosal layer
pT2: Tumor invades the muscularis propriaMRT2: Tumor signal intensity extends into the muscle layer, with loss of the interface between the submucosa and circular muscle layer
pT3: Tumor invades through the muscularis propria into the subserosa or into the nonperitonealized pericolic or perirectal tissuesMRT3: Tumor signal intensity extends through the muscle layer into the perirectal fat, with obliteration of the interface between muscle and perirectal fat
pT4: Tumor directly invades other organs or structures or perforates the visceral peritoneumMRT4: Tumor signal intensity extends into an adjacent structure or viscus
Table 2 Accuracy for each T stage (n/n)%
pT2 (n = 20)pT3 (n = 42)pT4 (n = 5)
Accuracy(60/67) 89.6(57/67) 85.1(64/67) 95.5
Sensitivity(14/20) 70.0(38/42) 90.5(5/5) 100
Specificity(46/47) 97.9(19/25) 76.0(59/62) 95.2
PPV(14/15) 93.3(38/44) 86.4(5/8) 62.5
NPV(46/52) 88.5(19/23) 82.6(59/59) 100