CT four-phase liver (protocol)

Last revised by Andrew Murphy on 23 Mar 2023

The four-phase liver CT protocol is a useful examination in the assessment of focal liver lesions, hypervascular liver metastasis and endocrine tumors.

It is a triple-phase liver with an initial non-contrast component included before the intravenous contrast medium is given, often requested if patients have received an injection of drug-eluting beads such as Lipiodol.

It involves a non-contrast liver followed by a dedicated late arterial phaseportal venous phase and delayed phase acquisition. 

NB: This article is intended to outline some general principles of protocol design. The specifics will vary depending on CT hardware and software, radiologists' and referrers' preference, institutional protocols, patient factors (e.g. allergy) and time constraints. 

Suspected liver lesions such as hepatocellular carcinomafocal nodular hyperplasiaadenomashemangiomas. Combined with the presence of scar tissue, or an injection of drug-eluting beads such as Lipiodol, whereby the unenhanced phase will act as a suitable baseline for comparing other phases.

Differentiating liver lesions on non-contrast studies is difficult due to the homogeneity of the liver tissue on CT however this exam helps solve that problem. The portal vein accounts for~75% of the liver's blood supply with the remainder from the hepatic artery, so a later arterial phase is required for the best enhancement of the parenchyma.

To help characterize the vascularity of hypervascular liver lesions. This examination is most typically utilized to differentiate a hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) from other lesions.

A hepatocellular carcinoma, a highly vascular primary lesion, will typically demonstrate hyperenhancement in the arterial phase and venous or delayed phase washout whilst a hemangioma should match the blood pool in each phase (same as the aorta in arterial etc.).

  • patient position
    • supine with their arms above their head
  • scout 
    • diaphragm to iliac crests
  • scan extent 
    • diaphragm to iliac crests
  • scan direction
    • craniocaudal
  • non-contrast phase
    • no delay, performed before injection
  • contrast injection considerations (bolus tracking)
    • monitoring slice (region of interest)
      • level of the diaphragmatic hiatus or first lumbar vertebra at the aorta
  • threshold
  • volume
    • 100-120 mL of non-ionic contrast at 3 to 5 mL/s (a higher flow rate will equal greater enhancement 2
  • scan delay 1
    • late arterial phase
      • ​15-30 seconds post bolus trigger (35-45 s after injection)
    • portal venous phase
      • ​60-75 seconds post-injection (independent of arterial timing)
    • delayed phase
      • 2-5 minutes
  • respiration phase
    • inspiration, breath-hold
  • an understanding of how each phase should appear is important 1:
    • late arterial phase
      • portal vein enhanced without hepatic venous enhancement
        • hepatocellular carcinoma may only show enhancement in the late arterial phase so this is very important
    • portal venous phase
      • portal veins, hepatic veins (via antegrade flow) enhanced
    • delayed phase
      • portal and hepatic veins slightly enhanced by a lot less than that portal venous phase
  • slice thickness less than or equal to 5 mm

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