First clinical utility of sensing ultrasound localization microscopy (sULM): Identifying renal pseudotumors Journal Article


Authors: Bodard, S.; Denis, L.; Chabouh, G.; Anglicheau, D.; Hélénon, O.; Correas, J. M.; Couture, O.
Article Title: First clinical utility of sensing ultrasound localization microscopy (sULM): Identifying renal pseudotumors
Abstract: Rationale: Renal pseudotumors, which mimic tumors on imaging, pose diagnostic challenges that can lead to unnecessary interventions. Sensing ultrasound localization microscopy (sULM) is an advanced imaging technique that uses ultrasound imaging and microbubbles as sensors to visualize kidney functional units. This study aims to investigate whether sULM could differentiate between renal pseudotumors and tumors based on the presence of glomeruli. Methods: Eleven patients (6 tumors, 6 pseudotumors - 1 patient with 2 pseudotumors) were included. Data on patient demographics, tumor characteristics, and sULM metrics were collected. Glomeruli were quantified and compared among tumors, pseudotumors, and renal cortex using sULM. Additional metrics, i.e., normalized speed and dispersity, were also analyzed. Results: Renal tumors exhibited fewer detected glomeruli paths (mean: 10 ± 6 /cm2 [range: 4–20]) compared to pseudotumors (26 ± 5 /cm2 [19–32], p < 0.001) and normal renal cortex (26 ± 6 /cm2 [15–35], p < 0.01). Tumors displayed lower dispersity (0.13 ± 0.06 arbitrary units [a.u.] [0.07–0.20]) than both the renal cortex (0.3 ± 0.1 a.u. [0.1–0.4], p = 0.0012) and pseudotumors (0.22 ± 0.05 a.u. [0.16-0.25], p = 0.0389), and lower normalized speeds of 0.08 ± 0.04 without units (w.u.) [range: 0.03–0.17] compared to the renal cortex (0.18 ± 0.07 w.u. [0.11–0.28], p = 0.0014) and pseudotumors (0.14 ± 0.02 w.u. [0.12–0.16], p = 0.0497). sULM could effectively differentiate renal pseudotumors from tumors based on glomerular detection and metrics estimation. Conclusion: This initial exploration into the clinical utility of sULM suggests it could provide a noninvasive tool to support patient management, particularly for individuals with contraindications to conventional imaging methods. Further studies are needed to confirm these preliminary findings. © The author(s).
Keywords: adult; clinical article; aged; middle aged; microscopy; nuclear magnetic resonance imaging; gold standard; computer assisted tomography; image analysis; diagnosis, differential; differential diagnosis; pathology; diagnostic imaging; renal cell carcinoma; ultrasound; kidney neoplasms; body mass; kidney; kidney tumor; algorithm; angiomyolipoma; echography; glomerulus filtration rate; pseudotumor; analysis of variance; thyroid papillary carcinoma; ultrasonography; kidney cortex; plasma cell granuloma; granuloma, plasma cell; kidney glomerulus; contrast-enhanced ultrasound; procedures; microbubbles; microbubble; glomerulus; estimated glomerular filtration rate; humans; human; male; female; article; x-ray computed tomography; utility value; sulfur hexafluoride; sensing ultrasound localization microscopy
Journal Title: Theranostics
Volume: 15
Issue: 1
ISSN: 1838-7640
Publisher: Ivyspring International Publisher  
Date Published: 2025-01-01
Start Page: 233
End Page: 244
Language: English
DOI: 10.7150/thno.100897
PUBMED: 39744234
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC11667240
DOI/URL:
Notes: Source: Scopus
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  1. Sylvain Bodard
    16 Bodard